
txSfc??? 




Gass 
Book 



TOPYRIGHT DEPOSIT 




Qouhs Tog^dcK OTgdj eihs aurocpucs (fXtnuJV 
lov o^ iKTvncolov tfK \myvovTtS <p{\oi 



u\oCT£ qpoLuXtf o tjfui'jjLHUOL Jco 



^£(X(pV 

WM fculp; 



SOME ACCOUNT 



OF THK 



LIFE AND WRITINGS 



OF 



JOHN MILTON. 



BY THE REV. HENRY JOHN TODD, M.A.F.A.S. 

RECTOR OF ALLHALLQWS, LOMBARD-STREET, &C. 
THE SECOND EDITION, WITH ADDITIONS, 

AND WITH 

A VERBAL IXDEX TO THE WHOLE OF MILTON'S POETRY 



LONDON: 

Printed for j. John Ion ; R. Baldwin ; Otridge and Son; Nichols and Son; 
F. C. and J. Rivington ; T. Payne; J. Walker; W. Lowndes; Scateherd 
and Letterruan; J. Nunn ; Willcie and Robinfon ; Clarke and Sons; 
R. Lea; E. JerFerey ; J. Carpenter; Longman, Hurft, Rees, and Orrne ; 
Cadell and Davies; Lackington, Alien, and Co. ; Vernor, Hood, and Sbarpe, 
John Richard Ion ; James Richardfon; J. Mawman; J. Hariris ; and 
Mathews and Leigh : 

By Law and Gilbert, St. John' s-Squ ate, Clerkenwell. 



1800. 






3 S^^(c 
8-4 



ADVERTISEMENT. 



THE following Account of Milton's Life 
and Writings, and the Verbal Index to his Poetry y 
are what accompany my fecond edition of his 
Poetical Works. It has been fuggefted, that to 
fome readers of Milton they might not perhaps be 
unacceptable in a feparate volume. To the candid 
notice of fuch, they are accordingly thus offered. 

Of my biographical attempt (fuch as it is) the 
materials have been drawn, as I formerly ftated, 
from authentick fources. In it fome new anecdotes 
relating to the hiftory of Milton's friends, of his 
works, and of his times, were interwoven ; to which 
additions are now made. Thefe circumftances per- 
haps may plead as fome apology for my raihnefs, 
in affecting to {ketch the poet, whom the mafterly 
hands of a Johnfon and an Hayley have depicted ; 
a raihnefs to which I was impelled by the perfuafion 
of others, that, to a new edition of his works, it is 
a cuftom to prefix the Life of the Author. To this 
cuitom indeed Engliih biography has lately been 
indebted for a fpirited acquifition ; the Life of 
Milton, accompanying an edition of his Prole- 
Works, written by the Rev. Dr. Symmons ; a com- 
pofition, which, like thofe of Johnfon and Hayley, 
oppofes to my unadorned narration a very brilliant, 
contraft. Cheerfully conceding the honour due to 
this work, I claim the liberty, however, of differing 
from the eloquent biographer in fome political fen- 
timents, and of refilling my affent to one or two of 
his afiertions and literary opinions. 



[ vi ] 

For the Index I folicit approbation, as being a 
copious Index not merely to the Paradife Loft, like 
that which accompanies Dr. Newton's edition of 
Milton's Poetical Works, or that which had # before 
appeared as a separate publication ; But to All the 
Poems of our illuftrious author, and applicable to 
t any edition of thefe Poems. It is not pretended, 
that in fuch a multiplicity of references the reader 
might feek in vain for errours. The vigilance of the 
niceft e)'e, it will be allowed, may, in attending to 
a work of this kind, be fome times deceived. How- 
ever, to the laborious completion of this work I 
have cheerfully fubinitted for the love and veneration 
with which I regard the ftrains of Milton, and for 
the refpect which I owe my country in giving fuch 
ufeful references to the language of its fublimeft 
bard. 

London, April 25, I8O9. 

HENRY J. TODD. 



* Entitled, A Verbal Index to Milton's Paradife Loft, 
adapted to every edition but the firft, which was publifhed in 
ten books only. London, 1741. 12mo. 

t To the works of our great dramaticlc poet the fame atten- 
tion has been excellently (hewn, in a feparate publication of 
uncommon labour and accuracy, entitled, A Verbal Index to 
the Plays of Shakfpeare, adapted to all the editions, cVc. By 
Francis Twifs, Efq. Loud. 1805. 2 vols. 8vo. 



CONTENTS 

Page 

Some Account of the Life and Writings of Milton 1 

Nuncupative Will of Milton - - - 165 

Lift of Editions, Transitions, and Alterations, of 

Milton's Poetical Works - - - 189 

lift of Detached Pieces of Criticifm relating to 

Milton's Poetical Works - - - 212 

Verbal Index to Milton's Poetry' - - - 219 



SOME ACCOUNT 

OP THE 

LIFE AND WRITINGS 

OF 

MILTON, 



%T0HN MILTON, fon of John and Sarah Milton, 
was born on the 9th of December a 1608, at the 
houfe of his father, who was then an eminent fcrivener 
in London, and lived at the fign of the Spread Eagle 
(which was the armorial enfign of the family) in 
Bread-ftreet. The anceftry of the poet was highly 
refpe&able. His father was educated as a gentleman, 
and became a b member of Chriil-Church, Oxford ; 
in which fociety, as it may be prefumed, he imbibed 
his attachment to the doctrines of the Reformation, 
and abjured the errours of Popery ; in confequence 
of which, his father, who was a bigotted papilt dis- 
inherited him. The ftudent therefore chofe, for his 
fupport, the profeffion already mentioned ; in the 
practice of which he became fo fuccefstul as to be 
enabled to give his children the advantages of a polite 
education, and at length to retire with comfort into 
the country. 

* " The xx th daye of December l608 was baptized John, the 
fonne of John Mylton, fcrivenor." ExtraStfrom the Regifter of 
Allkallows, Bread-Jlreet. 

b See the firft Note on Milton's Verfes AdPatrem. 

YOL. I, B 



2 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

The grandfather of the poet was under-r anger of 
keeper of the foreft of Shotover, near Halton in 
Oxfordfhire ; and probably refided at the village of 
Milton in that neighbourhood, c where the family of 
Milton, in remoter times, were diftinguifhed for their 
opulence ; till, one of them having taken the un- 
fortunate fide in the civil wars of York and Lancafter, 
the eftate was fequeitered ; and the proprietor was 
left with nothing but what he d held by his wife* 
There is a tradition e that the poet had once refided 
in this village, while he was Secretary to Cromwell. 

The mother of Milton is faid by f Wood, from 
Aubrey, to have been a Bradfhaw ; defcended from 
a family of that name in Lancafhire. Peck relates, 
that he was s informed me was a Haughton of 
Haughton-tower in the fame county. But Phillips, 
her grandfon, whofe authority it is moft reafonable to 
admit, h affirms, in his Life of Milton, that fhe was a 
Cafton, of a genteel family derived originally from 

c In the Regifters of Milton, as I have been obligingly in- 
formed by letter from the Rev. Mr. Jones, there are however no 
entries of the name of Milton. Phillips, Milton's nephew, fays 
that the family refided at Milton near Abingdon in Oxford/hire, as 
appeared by the monuments then to be feen in Milton church. 
But that Milton is in Birkjhirc; and Dr. Newton iVarched in 
vain for the monuments faid to exifl in that church. The in- 
formation of Wood is mod probably correct, that they lived at 
Milton near Halton and Thame. 

d Phillips's Life of Milton, 16"9-1. p. iv. 

e Communicated to me by letter from Milton. 

f Fafti Ox. vol. i. p. 262, &c. chiefly taken, as M r. War ton 
has ohferved, from Aubrey's nianufcript Life Of Milton, pre- 
ferved in the Afhnmlean Mufeum, Oxford. 

s Memoirs of Milton, 1740, p. I 

h Life of Milton, p. v. 



AND WHITINGS OF MILTON. 3 

Wales. Milton himielf has l recorded, with becoming 
reference to the refpectability of his defcent, the great 
efteem in which ilie was held for her virtues, more 
particularly for her charity. 

His father was particularly diftinguiihed for his 
mufical abilities. He is faid to have been a k volu- 
minous compoier, and equal in fcience, if not in 
genius, to the heft muficians of his age. Sir John 
Hawkins and Dr. Burney, in their Hiftories of Mufick, 
have each felecled a fpecimen of his ikill. He has 
been mentioned alio by * Mr. Warton, as the author 
of A fivefold Politician. Together zvith a five-fold 
precept of Policy. Lond. 1 609- But Mr. Hayley 
agrees with Di\ Farmer and Mr. Reed in affigning 
that work rather to John Melton, author of the 
AJirologq/ier, than to the father of our poet. Of his 
attachment to literature, however, the Latin verfes of 
his fon, addreffed to him with no lefs elegance than 
gratitude, are an unequivocal proof. Perhaps it may 
again be confounding him with the author of the 
Aftrologafter, in noticing the perfon who figns him- 
ielf John Melton, citizen of London, at the clofe of 
a very indifferent Sonnet of fourteen lines, addreffed 
to John Lane on his Guy of Warwick, which is pre- 
ferved in the Britiih Mufeum, and bears the date of 
licence for being printed in July 1617. This John 
Lane is the perfon whom Milton's nephew calls m " a 

5 Londini fum natus, genere hojiejlo, patre viro integerrimo, 
ftiatre probatiffimli, et eleemofynis per viciniam potiffimilm not&, 
Defenf.fec. vol. iii. p. 95. edit. fol. l6\9S. 

k Dr. Burney's Hift. of Mufick, vol. iii. p. 134. 

* See the Note on ver. 66, Ad Patrem, 

• Phillips's Theatrum Poetarum, 1675. p. 111. 

■B2 



4 SOME ACCOUNT OP THE LIFE 

line old queen Elizabeth gentleman, who was living 
within his remembrance," and of whole poems he 
gives a very flattering character. The Sonnet is en- 
titled " In Poefis Laudemf and is not worth citing. 
But a little poem, to which the muiick of the elder 
Milton's Madrigal is adapted, (whether the poetical 
as well as the mufical compolition be his or not,) is 
given n below, on account of the circumflance which 
occafioned it, (that of flattering a maiden queen on 
the verge of feventy,) as a curiofity. 

The care, with which Milton was educated, (hows 
the ° difcernment of his father. The bloom of genius 
was fondly noticed, and wifely encouraged. He was 

n See the note on ver. 66. AdPatrem. And Madrigales, viz. 
The Triumphes of Oriana, to 5 and 6 voices, compofed by 
diuers feuerall aucthors. Newly publiihed by Thomas Morley, 
Batcheler of Mufick, &c. 4to. Loud. l601. 

For 6. Voices. Mad. XVIII. 
Fay re Orian in the morne, 
Before the day was borne, 
With velvet fteps on ground, 
Which made nor print nor found, 
Would fee hir nymphs abed, 
What lives thofe ladies led: 
The rofes blufhing fayd, 
O (lay thou fhepherd's mayd : 
And on a fodain all 
They rofe and heard hir call. 
Then fang thofe fhephcrds and nymphs of Diana, 
Long live faire Oriana ! 

• The Annual Hegifter of 176*2 very erroneoufly refers to 
Milton's poem Ad Put rem, in order to fupport the following 
miftaken aflcrtion : M Ariofto often lamented,^ as Ovid and Pe* 
trarch did before him, and our own Milton fince, that his father 
hamjhvd him from the Miifcs." Characters, Life of Ariofto, p. 23. 
Milton's verles to his father prove exaclly the reverfe. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 5 

fo happy, fays Dr. Newton, as to mare the advan- 
tages both of private and publiGk education. He 
was at 'firft inftructed, by private tuition, under 
p Thomas Young, whom Aubrey calls " a puritan in 
Effex who cutt his haire ihort ;" who, having quitted 
his country on account of his religious opinions, be- 
came Chaplain to the Englifh merchants at Ham- 
burgh; but afterwards returned, and during the 
ufurpation of Cromwell was mafter of Jefus College, 
Cambridge. Of the pupil's affection for his early 
tutor, his fourth elegy, and two Latin epiftles, are 
publick teftimonies. Mr. Hayley confiders the por- 
trait of Milton by Cornelius Janfen, drawn when he 
was only ten years old, at which age Aubrey affirms 
" he xv as a poet," as having been executed in order 
to operate as a powerful incentive to the future ex- 
ertion of the infant author. This fuppofition is very 
probable : And, as the portrait was drawn by a 
painter q then rifing into fame, and whole price for a 

P See the Notes at the beginning of Milton's fourth Elegy. 
If Milton imbibed from this inftructer, as Mr, Warton fup- 
pofes, the principles of puritanifm, it may be curious to re- 
mark that he never adopted from him the outward fymbol of the 
feci:. Milton preferved his " cluttering locks" throughout the 
reign of the round-heads. Wood, describing the Seekers who 
came to preach at Oxford in 1647, affords a proper commentary 
on Young's cutting his hairjhort. " The generality of them had 
mortified countenances, puling voices, and eyes commonly, when 
in difcourfe, lifted up, with hands lying on their breafts. They 
mofily had jhort hair, which at this time was commonly called 
the Committee cut, &c." Fafti. Ox. vol. ii. p. 6l. 

? Janfen's firft works in England are faid to be dated about 
l6l8 ; the year, in which the young poet's portrait was drawn. 
See Walpole's Anecdotes of Painting, Works, vol. iii. p. 149, 
edit. 1798. 



6 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

head was five broad pieces, the mark of encourage- 
ment was rendered more handfome and more con- 
fpicuous. 

From the tuition of Mr. Young, Milton was re- 
moved to St. Paul's School, under the care of r Alex- 
ander Gill, who at that time was the mafter ; to whofe 
ion, who was then uiher and afterwards mailer, and 
with whom Milton was a favourite fcholar, are ad* 
drefled, in friendiliip, three of the poet's Latin epiftles, 
There is 8 no rcgilter of admifiions into St. Paul's 
School fo far back as the beginning of the feventeenth 
century. But, as Milton's domeftick preceptor quitted 
England in \6 l 23, it is probable that he was then ad- 
mitted iuto that feminary ; at which time he was in 
his fifteenth year. He had already ftudied Avith un- 
common avidity ; but at the fame time with fuch in- 
attention to his health, fcldom retiring from his books 
before midnight, that the fource of his blindnefs may 
be traced to his early paffion for letters. In his. 
twelfth year,- as l he tells us, this literary devotion 

r Sec the firft Note on the firft Elegy. 

s As I found, upon inquiry of the Rev. Dr. Roberts, the pre- 
fent I lead- Mafter. 

1 " Pater me pucrulum humaniorum literarum ftudiis defa- 
lk it; quas ita avide arripui, ut ub anno cclatis duodecimo vix 
unquam ante mediam noclam a lucubrationibus cubituin difce- 
dcrcm ; quae prima oculorum pcrnicies fuit quorum ad naturalem 
dcbilitatem acceflerant et crebi capitis dolores; quae omnia cum 
difcendi impetum non retardarent, et in ludo literario, etfubaliis 
domi magjftris erudiendum quotidie curavit." Def.fec. ut fupr. 
Aubrey ii 1 i > relates, that M wlicn Milton went to fchoole, and 
when lie whs very younge, lie fludied very hard, and fate up 
very late, commonly tiP twelve or one o'clock; and his father 
( rdcred the maid to felt up for him." MS. Afhnol. Muf. ut fupr. 
His early reading was in poetical books. See the Notes on the 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 7 

began ; from which he was not to be deterred either 
by the natural debility of his eyes, or by his frequent 
head-aches. The union of genius and application 
in the fame perfon was never more confpicuous. 

In 1623 he produced his firft poetical attempts, 
the Tr (inflations of the 1 \4th and 1 36th Pfalms, to 
which, as to fome other juvenile productions, he has 
annexed the date of his age. It has been uncandidly 
fuppofed, that he intended, by this method, to ob- 
trude the earlinefs of his own proficiency on the 
notice of pofterity. Dr. Johnfon calls it " a boq/i, 
of which Politian has given him an example." Mil- 
ton and Politian have followed claffical authority, 
Lucan u thus fpeaks of himfelf ; 

" Eft mihi, crede, meis animus conftantior annis, 
* Quamvis nunc juvenile decus mihi pingere malas 
H Coeperit, et nondum vicefima venerit aeftas." 

But who will deny, that in thefe Tranflations the 
dawning of real genius may be difcerned; or that 
his Ode, On the death of a fair Infant, written 
foon after, difplays, as a poetical compofition, the 
vigour and judgement of maturer life, and affects, 
by its fenfibility, the feeling mind ! The verfes alfo, 
At a Vacation Exercife in the College, written at 
the age of nineteen, have been repeatedly and juftly 
noticed as containing indications of the future bard, 

Tranflations of the 114th and 136'thPfalms in the feventh volume 
of this edition. Humphry Lownes, a printer, living in the fame 
ureet with his father, fupplied him at leaft with Spenfer and 
Sylvefter's Du Bartas. 

u Lucanus de feipfo, in Panesyrico ad Calpurnium Pifonem. 
Epigr. % Poem. Vet. Paris, 1590, p. 121, 



8 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

" whole genius was equal to a fubject that carried 
him beyond the limits of the world." 

Few readers will be inclined to admit that Cowley 
and other poets have furpaffed, in " products of 
vernal fertility," the efforts of Milton. Few will regard, 
without averiion, the unfair x comparifon of Milton's 
juvenile effufions with thofe of Chatterton. Milton, 
as he is the moft learned of modern poets, may per- 
haps retain his princely rank alfo in the lift of thofe 
who have written valuable pieces at as early or an 
earlier age ; and Politian, Taflb, Cowley, Metaftafio, 
Voltaire, and Pope, may bow to him, " as to fupe- 
riour Spirits is due." 

In the 17th year of his age, diftinguilhed as a 
clafiical fcholar, and converfant in feveral languages, 
he was fent, from St. Paul's School, to Cambridge ; 
and was y admitted a Peniioner at Chrift College on 
the 112th of February, 16124-5, under the tuition of 
Mr. William Chappel, afterwards Biihop of Cork 
and Rofs in Ireland. Here he attracted particular 
notice by his academical exercifes, as well as by 
feveral copies of verfes, both Latin and Englifh, upon 
occafional fubjects. He neglected indeed no part of 
literature, although his chief object feems to have 
been the cultivation of his poetical abilities. " This 
good hap I had from a careful education," he fays ; 
" to be inured and feafoned betimes with the beft 

* In the Biograph. Brit. vol. iv. p. 59 1. edit. Kippis. 

y '* Johannes Milton, LondinenQs, filius Johannes, inftitutus 
fuit in Literarum dementis fub Mag ro . Gill, Gymnafii Paulini 
Praefe&o, admifiug eft Penflonarim Minor Feb. 12°. 1624, fub 
M ro . Chappell, folvitque pro Ingr, 0. 10. 8." Ext raft from the 
College ltcgijlcr. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 9 

and eleganteft authors of the learned tongues ; and 
thereto brought an ear that could meafure a just 
cadence, and fcan without articulating ; rather nice 
and humourous in what was tolerable, than patient 
to read every drawling vernfier." 

To his eminent ikill, at this time, in the Latin 
tongue Dr. Johnfon affords his tribute of commen- 
dation. " Many of his elegies appear to have been 
written in his eighteenth year ; by which it appears 
that he had then read the Roman authors with nice 
difcernment. I once heard Mr. Hampton, the trans- 
lator of Polybius, remark, what I think is true, that 
Milton was the firft Englifhman who, after the re- 
vival of letters, wrote Latin verfes with claffick ele- 
gance." Milton's Latin exercifes, which he recited 
publickly, are alio marked with char after iftick ani- 
mation, From fome remarkable paffages in thefe, as 
Mr. Hay ley obferves, it appears " that he was firft 
an object of partial fever ity, and afterwards of ge- 
neral admiration, in his college. He had differed 
in opinion concerning a plan of academical ftudies 
with fome perfons of authority in his College, and 
thus excited their difpleafure. He fpeaks of them 
as highly incenfed againft him ; but expreffes, with 
the moft liberal fenfibility, his furprife, delight, and 
gratitude, in finding that his enemies forgot their, 
animolity to honour him with unexpected applaufe." 

But incidents unfavourable to the character of 
Milton, while a ftudent at Cambridge, have been 
pofitively afferted to be contained in his own words ; 
and the poet has been fummoned to prove his own 
flagellation and banifhment in the following verfes, in 
bis firft elegy : 



10 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

" Jam nee arundiferum mihi cura revifere Camum,, 

<£ Nee dudum vet it i me lark angit amor. — 
<e Nee duri libet ufque miuas perferre Magiftri, 

u Cateraque ingenio non fubeunda meo" 
" Si fit hoc exilium patrias adiiffe penates, 

" Et vacuum curis otia grata fequi, 
u Non ego vel profugi nomen fortemve recufo, 

" Ldetus et exilii conditione fruor." 

On thefe lines I muft introduce Mr. Warton's ob- 
fervation. 

ri The words vetiti laris, and afterwards exilium, will not 
fuffer us to determine otherwife, than that Milton was fen 
tenced to undergo a temporary removal or ruftication from 
Cambridge. I will not fuppofe for any immoral irregularity. 
Dr. Bainbridge, the Mafter, is reported to have been a very 
a6tive difciplinarian : and this lover of liberty, we may pre- 
fume, was as little difpofed to fubmiffion and conformity in a 
college as in a ftate. When reprimanded and admoniflied^ 
the pride of his temper, impatient of any fort of reproof, na- 
turally broke forth into expreilions of contumely and con- 
tempt againft his govemour. Hence he was punifhed. He 
is alfo faid to have been whipped at Cambridge. See Life of 
Bathurjly p. 153. This has been reprobated and difcredited, 
as a moft extraordinary and improbable piece of feverity. 
But in those days of fimplicity and fubordination, of rough- 
nefs and rigour, this fort of puniihment was much more com- 
mon, and consequently by no means fo difgraceful and un- 
feemly for a young man at the univerfity, as it would be 
thought at prc-fent. We learn from Wood, that Henry 
Stubbe, a Student of Chrift Church, Oxford, afterwards a 
partilan of Sir Henry Vane, ' mewing himfelf too forward, 
pragmatical, and conceited/ was publickly whipped by the 
Cenfor in the college-hall. Ath. Oxon. vol. ii. p. .560. See 
alfo Life of Bathurjly p. 902. I learn from fome manufcript 
papers of Aubrey the antiquary, who was a (Indent of Trinity 
college Oxford,' four years from 1642, * that at Oxford and, 
I believe, at Cambridge, the rod was frequently ufed by the 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 11 

tutors and deans : and Dr. Potter, while a tutor of Trinity 
college, I knew right well, whipt his pupil with his fword by 
his fide, when he came to take his leave of him to go to the 
inns of court/ In the Statutes of the faid college, given in 
1556, the Scholars of the foundation are ordered to be 
whipped by the Deans, or Cenfors, even to their twentieth 
year. In the Univerfity Statutes at Oxford, compiled in 
1635, ten years after Milton's admiffion at Cambridge, cor- 
poral puniihment is to be inflicted on boys under fixteen. 
We are to recollect, that Milton, when he went to Cambridge, 
was only a boy of fifteen z . The author of an old pamphlet, 
Megicides no Saints nor Martyrs, fays that Hugh Peters, 
while at Trinity college, Cambridge, was publickly and offi- 
cially whipped in the Regent-walk for his infolence, p. 81 . 8vo. 
" The anecdote of Milton's whipping at Cambridge, is 
told by Aubrey. MS. Muf. AJhm. Oxon. Num. x. P. iii. 
From which, by the way, Wood's Life of Milton in the 
Fajii Oxonienfes, the firft and the ground-work of all the 
lives of Milton, was compiled. Wood fays, that he draws 
his account of Milton c from his own mouth to my Friend, 
who was well acquainted with and had from him, and from 
his relations after his death, moft of this account of his life 
and writings following.' Ath, Oxon, vol. i. Fafti, p. 262. 
This Friend is Aubrey ; whom Wood, in another place, calls 
credulous, ' roving and magotie-headed, and fometimes little 
better than crafed.' Life of A, Wood, p. 577. edit. Hearne, 
Th. Caii Find. &c. vol. ii. This was after a quarrel. I 
know not that Aubrey is ever fantaftical, except on the fub- 
je&s of chemiftry and ghofts. Nor do I remember that his 
veracity was ever impeached. I believe he had much lefs 
credulity than Wood. Aubrey's Monumenta Britannica is 
a very folid and rational work, and its judicious conjectures 
and observations have been approved and adopted by the beft 
modern antiquaries. Aubrey's manufcript Life contains fome 
anecdotes of Milton yet unpublifhed. 

s Mr. Warton is miflaken in this auertion. Milton, when he 
went to Cambridge, was in his feventeenth year. But this will 
prefently be more largely conudered. 



12 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

<e But let us examine if the context will admit fome other 
interpretation. Q&teraque, the inoft indefinite and compre- 
henfive of descriptions, may be thought to mean literary tafks 
called impofitions, or frequent compulfive attendances on te - 
dious and unimproving exercifes in a college-hall. But catera 
follows minas, and perferre feems to imply fomewhat more 
than thefe inconveniences, fomething that was fuffertd, and 
feverely felt. It has been fuggefted, that his father's economy 
prevented his conftant refidence at Cambridge ; and that this 
made the college lar dudum vetitus, and his abfeiice from the 
univerfity an exilium. But it was no unpleafing or involun- 
tary banifhment. He hated the place. He was not only 
offended at the college-difcipline, but had even conceived a 
dislike to the face of the country, the fields about Cambridge. 
He peeviflily complains, that the fields have no foft (hades to 
attract the Mufe ; and there is fomething pointed in his ex- 
clamation, that Cambridge was a place quite incompatible 
with the votaries of Phcebus. Here a father's prohibition 
had nothing to do. He refolves, however, to forget all thefe 
difagreeable circumftances, and to return in due time. The 
difmiflion, if any, was not to be perpetual. In thefe lines, 
ingenium is to be rendered temper, nature, difpofition, rather 
than genius. 

" Aubrey fays, from the information of our author's brother 
Chriftopher, that Milton's ' firft tutor there [at Chrift's col- 
lege] was Mr. Chappell, from whom receiving fome unkind- 
neife, (he whipt him) he was afterwards, though it feemed 
againft the rules of the college, transferred to the tuition of 
one Mr. To veil a , who dyed parfon of Lutterworth.' MS. 
Muf. Jfhm. ut fupr. This information, which (lands detached 
from the body of Aubrey's narrative, feems to have been 
communicated to Aubrey, after Wood had feen his papers ; 
it therefore does not appear in Wood, who never would 
otherwife have fupprefied an anecdote which contributed in the 

* It mould be Tovey. I have fecn the fignaturc of his name 
to fome resolutions ofhis college, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. is 

kaft degree to expofe the character of Milton. I muft here 
obferve, that Mr. Chappell, from his original Letters, many 
of which I have feen, written while he was a fellow and tutor 
of Chrift's College, and while Milton was there, and which 
are now in the poffeffion of Mr. Moreton of Wefterham in 
Kent, by whom they have been politely communicated, ap- 
pears to have been a man of uncommon mildnefs and libe- 
rality of manners." 

To the authority of the preceding remarks Dr. 
Johnfon has implicitly fubfcribed ; not without add- 
ing, however, that it may be conjectured, from the 
willingnefs with which the poet has perpetuated the 
memory of his exile, that its caufe was fuch as gave 
him no ihame. 

That flagellation might be performed upon offen- 
ders at Cambridge, (as well as at Oxford,) the Sta- 
tutes of that univerfity will mow : That Milton fuf- 
fered this publick indignity, refts folely upon the 
teftimony of Aubrey, which I am unable to con- 
trovert: But it is remarkable that it never mould 
have been noticed by thofe who would have rejoiced 
in fuch an opportunity of expofing Milton to a little 
ridicule. Yet further. It is related by Mr. Warton, 
that, " in the Univerfity Statutes at Oxford, com- 
piled in 1635, ten years after Milton's admuTion at 
Cambridge, corporal punimment is to be inflicted on 
boys under fix teen. We are to recollect, that Milton, 
when he went to Cambridge, was only a boy of 
fifteen? This is a miftake. Milton was in his 
Jeventeenth* year', when he was admitted at Chrift's 
College. And if the fame exemption was granted 

b See the Extrad from the College Regifter, p. 8. 



14 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

to boys of jixteen at Cambridge, as to thole of the 
fame age at Oxford, the flagellation of Milton be* 
comes itill lefs entitled to credit. One of the ftatutes 
of Chrift's College, entitled Cap. 37- De Leclork 
Authoritate in Difcipulos, feems to countenance the 
fuppofition of fimilar exemption : After prefcribing 
that they, who abfent themfelves from certain Lec- 
tures, fhall hejined, the Statute fubjoins the follow- 
ing refervation ; u fi tamen adult as fuerit ; alioquin, 
virgd corrigatur" 

The application alfo of ccetera may be perhaps 
more general than Mr. Warton and Dr. Johnfon have 
been pleafed to confider it ; inftead of corporal pu~ 
nifhment, it may fuggeft the idea of academical re- 
Unctions, to which a youth of Milton's genius could 
not fubmit ; or merely of threats perhaps, which he 
thought he did not deferve ; and, if he therefore ac- 
quiefced in a ihort exile from Cambridge, as fome 
biographers fuppofe, it fhould feem that, by his ad* 
miffion to the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1628, he 
had incurred no lofs of terms; which, ruftication 
however muft have occafioned, and which the Re- 
gifter of his College, or of the Univerfity, would pro- 
bably have noticed. His reply to an enemy, who 
in the violence of controverfy had aiferted that he 
was expelled, may here be cited. c " I muft be 
thought if this libeller (for now he {hews himfelf to 
be fo) can find belief, after an inordinate and riot- 
ous youth [pent at the Univerfity, to have been at 
length vomited out thence. For which commodious 

c Apology for Sraeftymnuus. Profc-Works, vol. i. p. 174. 
edit. 1698^ 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 15 

lye, that he may be encouraged in the trade another 
time, I thank him ; for it hath given me an apt occa- 
lion to acknowledge publickly, with all gratefull 
mind, that more than ordinary favour and refpecl 
which I found above any of my equals at the hands 
of thofe courteous and learned men, the fellows of 
the College wherein I fpent fome years ; who at my 
parting, after I had taken two degrees, as the manner 
is, fignified many ways, how much better it would 
content them that I would ftay ; as by many letters, 
full of kindnefs and loving relpecl;, both before that 
time, and long after, I was affured of their fmgular 
good affection towards me/' And ftill more point- 
edly in another place : d " Pater me- Cantabri* 

giam mifit : Illic difciplinis atque artibus tradi folitis 
feptennium ftudui ; procul omni fagitio, bonis omni- 
bus probatus, ufquedum magiftri, quern vocant, gra- 
*im, &c." 

To oblige one of the fellows, his friends fo affec- 
tionately noticed, he wrote, in 1628, the comitial 
verfes, entitled Naturam non patifenium. I mention 
this in order to obviate a remark made by Dr. 
Johnfon, that the poet countenanced an opinion, 
prevalent in his time, " that the world was in its 
decay, and that we had the misfortune to be pro- 
duced in the decrepitude of nature." In the pre- 
ceding year the following very learned work had 
been published, " An Apologie or Declaration of 
the Power and Providence of God in the Govern- 
ment of the World, by George Hake will, D. D. and 
Archdeacon of Surrey, 1627." The young poet, I 

* Defenf. fee. Profe-Works, vol. iii. p. 95. edit. 1698. 



16 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

conceive, had been much pleafed with this excellent 
work, which refutes, with particular felicity of argu- 
ment, the abfurdity of fuppofing nature impaired. 
This forgotten folio has found an able advocate in 
modern days. " They," fays Dr. Warton, e "whom 
envy, malevolence, difcontent, or difappointment, 
have induced to think that the world is totally dege- 
nerated, and that it is daily growing worle and worfe, 
would do well to read a fenfible, but too much neg- 
lected, treatife of an old Divine, written in f 1630, 
HakewhTs Apology &c." This work was commended 
by Archbiihop g Ufher. A truly amiable and learned 
author, it may here be added, to whom the literature 
of this country is peculiarly indebted, has clofed his 
Philological Inquiries with a chapter, well calculated, 
like the animated lines of Milton, to baniili the timid 
and unbenevolent idea of nature's decrepitude. 

Milton was defigned by his parents, and once in 
his own refolutions, for the Church. But his fubfe- 
quent unwillingnefs to engage in the office of a mi* 
nifter was communicated to a friend in a letter; (of 
which two draughts exift in h manufcript ;) with 
which he fent his impreffive Sonnet, On his being 
arrived at the age of twenty three. The truth is, 

e Pope's Works, edit. 1797- vol. iv. p. 319. 

f This is the fccond edition of the work, which Dr. Wartoa 
feems not to have known. 

* See a Letter from Dr. Hakewill to Archbifhop Uflier, in 
the Life and Letters of Uflier by R. Parr, D.D. fol. 16S6. 
tetters, p. 398. 

k Sec Birch's Life of Milton, Dr. Newton's edit, of Milton, 
Sonnet vii. General Dictionary, 1738, vol. vii. And Biograph. 
Brit. 17G0, vol. v. Art. Milton, where they arc printed. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 17 

fays Dr. Newton, he had conceived early prejudices 
againft the doctrine and difcipline of the Church. 
This, no doubt, was a difappointment to his friends, 
who though in comfortable were yet by no means in 
great circumftances. Nor does he feem to have 
been difpofed to any profeffion. It is certain that 
he alfo declined the ' Law. He had probably read, 
with no flight attention, the conduct of Taffo, as de- 
fcribed by the noble biographer to whom he has ad- 
dreffed his admired eclogue : 

" k II qual poema [il Rinaldo] mando egli fuori per voler 
del Cardinal Luigi da Efte ; e con poco piacer di fuo padre ; 
il quale non haurebbe ci6 per due ragioni defiderato. Primi- 
eramente percioche Bernardo non rimaneua appagato, che 
l'animo del giouanetto s'appigliaife alia piaceuolezza della 
poefia, perche non deuiaffe (come aduienne) dallo ftudio 
delle leggi dal qual' egli fperaua maggiori comodi con l'ef- 
fempio in contrario di fe medetimo, che per molto, e per bene 
c' haueffe, & in verii, & in profa faputo fcriuere, non potette 
giammai per6 auanzare la mezzanita della fua fortuna ne difen- 
derfi dalla rea: nella qual cofa malageuolmente Torquato 
l'obediua, tirato altroue dal proprio genio, come ne' verli che 
feguono dietro a que' che detti habbiamo, fi legge : 

Ad altri ftudi, onde poi fpeme hauea 
Di riftorar d'auuerfa forte i danni, 

1 His contempt of the Law, as well as of the Church, is pretty 
ftrongly marked. See the Note Ad Patrem, ver. 71. To the 
ecclefiaftical lawyers he has mown no mercy ; but alludes to 
" chancellours and fuffragans, delegates and officials, with all 
the hell-pejiering rabble of fumners and apparitors, " in the very 
fpirit of Quevedo. See his AnimadverJiQiis, &c. Profe-Works, 
vol. i. p. 159. edit. 1698. 

k Vita di Torq.Taflb, fcritta da G. B. Manfo, 12 m0 Venet, 
1621, p. 32, 33, 

vol. i, C 



18 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Ingrati lludi, dal cui pondo oppreffo, 
Giaccio ignoto ad altrui graue a me fteffo." 

Rinaldo, Canto 12. ft. QO, 

Dr. Newton thinks that he had too free a fpirit to 
be limited and confined ; that he was for compre- 
hending all fciences, but profefiing none. His con- 
duct, however, on thefe occafions is a proof of the 9 
fincerity with which he had refoived to deliver his 
fentimcnts. l " For me, I have determined to lay 
up as the beft trcaf lire and folace of a good old age, 
if God vouchlafe it me, the honeit liberty of free 
fpeech from my youth." 

Having taken the degree of m M. A. in 1632, he 
left the univerlity, and retired to his father's houfe in 
the country ; who had now quitted bufmefs, and 
lived at an eftate which he had purchaled at Horton 
near Colnebrooke, in Buckinghamshire. Here he 
refided five years ; in which time he not only, as he 
himfelf informs us, read over the Greek and Latin 
authors, particularly the hiftorians, but is alfo be- 
lieved to have written his Arcades, Comus, L Allegro, 
II Penfcrofo, and Lycidas. The pleafant retreat in 
the country excited his moft poetick feelings ; and he 
has proved himfelf able, in his pictures of rural life, 
to rival the works of Nature which he contemplated 
with delight. In the neighbourhood of Horton the 
( ountefs Dowager of Derby refided ; and the Ar- 
cades was performed by her grand-children at this 
leat, called Ilarelicld-placc. It feems to me, that 

1 Profe-Worki, vol. i. p. 220. edit. i6'£)8. 

m He wu admitted to the fame demfl at Oxford in J635r 
See Wood, l-'afti, vol. i. p. J02. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 19 

Milton intended a compliment to his fair neighbour, 
(for n fair fhe was,) in his L Allegro : 

" Towers and battlements it fees 
" Bofom'd high in tufted trees, 
u Where perhaps fome Beauty lies,, 
" The Cynofure of neighbouring eyes." 

The woody fcenery of ° Harefield, and the perfonat 
aceompliihments of the Countefs, are not unfavour- 
able to this iuppofition ; which, if admitted, tends to 
confirm the opinion, that L Allegro and II Penferofo 
were compofed at Horton. 

The Malk of Comus, and Lycidas, were certainly- 
produced under the roof of his father. It may be 
obferved that, after his retirement to private ftudy, 
he paid great attention, like his mailer Spenfer, to 
the Italian fchool of poetry. Dr. Johnfon obferves, 
that his acquaintance with the Italian writers may be 
difcovered by the mixture of longer and fhorter verfes 
in Lycidas, according to the rules of Tufcan poetry." 
In Comus alfo the fweet rhythm and cadence of the 
Italian language are no lefs obfervable. I mufl here 
obferve that the houfe, in which Milton drew fuch 
enchanting fcenes, was about p ten years fince pulled 
down ; and that, during his refidence at Horton, he 
had occafionally taken lodgings in London, in order 
to cultivate muiick and mathematicks, to meet his 
friends from Cambridge, and to indulge his paifion 
for books. 

n See the preliminary Notes to Arcades, and alfo the poem, 
ver. 14, &c. 

o See Lyfons's Middlefex, 1800. Harefield, p. 108. 

p As I have been obligingly informed by letter from the pre- 
sent Reftor of Horton. 

c 2 



20 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

It feems to have been the notion, however, of the 
late Sir William Jones, that we are indebted, not to 
Horton, but to Foreft Hill, for Milton's defcriptive 
pictures of the country. That accomplished fcholar 
has thus delivered his opinion in a letter to Lady 
Spencer, dated from Oxford, 7. Sept. 1769> 

" q The neceffary trouble of correcting the firft printed 
meets of my hiftory, prevented me to-day from paying a 
proper refpecl: to the memory of Shakfpeare, by attending 
his jubilee. But I was refolved to do all the honour in my 
power to as great a poet ; and fet out in the morning in 
company with a friend to vifit a place, where Milton fpent 
fome part of his life, and where, in all probability, he com- 
pofed feveral of his car lie ji productions. It is a fmall village 
on a pleafant hill, about three miles from Oxford, called 
Foreft Hill, becaufe it formerly lay contiguous to a foreft, 
which has fince been cut down. The poet chofe this place 
of retirement after his firrt marriage, and he defcribes the 
beauties of his retreat, in that fine paffage of his L' Allegro : 

Sometime walkings not unfeen, 

By hedge-row elms, on hillocks green, — 

While the plowman near at hand, 

Y\ nifties o'er the furrow'd land, 

And the milk-maid fingeth blithe, 

And the mower whets his lithe. 

And every ihepherd tells his tale 

Under the haw thorn in the dale. 

Straight mine eye hath caught new plealuic.-. 

Whilft the landfkip round it meafures ; 

Rllfiet lawns, and fallows gray, 

A\ here the nibbling flocks do itray ; 

Mountains, on whole barren bread 

The labouring clouds do often refl ; 

* Lord Tcignmouth's Life of Sir William Jones, i-vo. edit. p. 83. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON, £1 

Meadows trim with daifies pide, 
Shallow brooks, and rivers wide : 
Towers and battlements it fees 
Bofom'd high in tufted trees- 
Hard by, a cottage chimney fmoaks, 
From betwixt two aged oaks, &c. 

" It was neither the proper feafon of the year, nor time 
of the day, to hear all the rural founds, and fee all the ob- 
jects mentioned in this defcription ; but, by a pleafing con- 
currence of circumftances, we were fainted, on our approach 
to the village, with the muiic of the mower and his fcythe ; 
we faw the ploughman intent upon his labour, and the milk- 
maid returning from her country employment. 

" As we afcended the hill, the variety of beautiful objects, 
the agreeable itillnefs and natural fimplicity of the whole 
fcene, gave us the higheft pleafure. We at length reached 
the fpot, whence Milton undoubtedly took tnoji of his images ; 
it is on the top of the hill, from which there is a raoft exten- 
iive profpeCt on all fides : the diitant mountains that feemed 
to fupport the clouds, the villages and turrets, partly lliaded 
with trees of the fineft verdure, and partly raifed above the 
groves that furrounded them, the dark plains and meadows 
of a greyifh colour, where the iheep were feeding at large, in 
fhort, the view 7 of the ftreams and rivers, convinced us that 
there was not a tingle ufelefs or idle word in the above-men- 
tioned defcription, but that it was a moil exact and lively 
reprefentation of nature. Thus will this fine paffage, which 
has always been admired for its elegance, receive an addi- 
tional beauty from its exactnefs. After we had walked, with 
a kind of poetical enthufiafm, over this enchanted ground, 
we returned to the village. 

" The poet's house was clofe to the church; the greateit 
part of it has been pulled down ; and what remains, belongs 
to an adjacent farm. I am informed that feveral papers in 
Milton's own hand, were found by the gentleman who was 
laft in poffeffion of the eftate. The tradition of his having 
lived there is current anions the villagers : one of them 



%% SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

{hewed us a ruinous wall that made part of his chamber, and 
I was much pleafed with another who had forgotten the 
name of Milton, but recollected him by the title of The 
Poet. 

" It muft not be omitted, that the groves near this village 
are famous for nightingales, which are fo elegantly defcribed 
in the Penferofo. Moil of the cottage windows are over- 
grown with fweet-briars, vines, and honey-fuckles ;, and, that 
Milton's habitation had the fame ruftick ornament, we may 
conclude from his defcriptjon of the lark bidding him good- 
morrow, 

Through the fweet-briar or the vine, 
Or the twifted eglantine : 

for it is evident, that he meant a fort of honey-fuckle by the 
eglantine ; though that word i9 commonly ufed for the 
fweet-briar, which he could not mention twice in the fame 
couplet. 

t( If ever I pafs a month or fix weeks at Oxford in the 
furnmer, 1 mall be inclined to hire and repair this venerable 
manfion, and to make a feftival for a circle of friends, in 
honour of Milton, the moft perfect fcholar, as well as the 
fublimeft poet, that our country ever produced. Such an 
honour will be lefs fplendid, but more fmcere and refpe&ful,, 
*hiui all the pomp and ceremony on the banks of the Avon. 

w I have the honour, Sic." 

Thit Milton refided at Foreft Hill, I am ready to 
admit ; but at periods, I conceive, far diitant from 
the composition of L Allegro and II Penferofo. The 
tradition that he did rcfide at this beautiful and 
beautifully <lefcribed village, is indeed r general; 

T Madame du Borage, in her entertaining Letters concerning 

id, fire, rciq tea that, vifiting, in June 1750, Baron Scluitz 

and L;:r!y at thei i houfe near Shotover Hill, " they (hewed me 

from B (mall mm ence Milton's houfe, tO which I bowed with 

all tli. q .sitii which that poet's memory infpires me/' 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 23 

though none of his biographers affert the circum- 
ftance. But Sir William Jones reprefents him to 
have chofen this place of retirement, after his Jirji 
marriage. Now Milton, we find, was not married 
before 1643, at which time he was in his thirty-fifth 
year; when, about Whitfuntide or a little after, 
" he s took a journey," fays his nephew Phillips, 
" into the country ; nobody about him certainly know- 
ing the reafon, or that it was more than a journey of 
recreation : after a month's ftay, home he returns a 
married man that went out a batchelor; his wife 
being Mary, the eldeft daughter of Mr. Richard 
Powell, then a juftice of peace, of Forejihil, near 
Shotover, in Oxfordfhire/' Anthony Wood relates 
alfo, that Milton courted, married, and brought his 
wife to his houfe in London, in one month's time; 
and that me was very young. She continued, how- 
ever, but a few weeks with her hufband, and re*- 
turned to Foreft Hill. Milton, as we mall prefently 
fee, difdained to follow her thither. But, after their 
reconciliation, it is probable that they were allowed 
by her father, who, I am * informed, pofTefTed another 
manfion in the neighbourhood, the occafional occu* 
pation of this retreat. Or, after the feizure of it by 
the rebels in 1646, Milton, we may eafily believe, 
pofTefTed fufficient intereft to obtain the reftitution of 
it to his father-in-law, (whofe affairs he is indeed 
faid u to have accommodated with the ruling party, 
and who is fuppofed to have quitted in 1647 the 
protection which Milton's houfe afforded him in Lon- 
don,) from whom he might fubfequently receive a 

s Life of Milton, p. xxii. 

1 By T. B. Richards, Efq. whofe intelligence is prefently given. 

a See Fcnton's narration in a fubfequent page. 



C4 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

grant of it. However, this concedes nothing to the 
affertion of L? Allegro being compofed at Foreft Hill. 
No. The early poems of Milton were written, I 
apprehend, long before the -date of his firft marriage ; 
and, as I have x already ftated, moft probably at 
Horton ; a point in which Mr. Haylev concurs with 
me, at leaft in reipect to I? Allegro and IlPenferofo. 
In the collection of thefe poems into a volume, which 
was published by Mofeley in 1645, and of which more 
v ill prefently be faid, U Allegro and IlPeriferofo pre- 
cede both Lycidas and Comus in the arrangement ; 
both of which refer to matters of a much earlier 
date than 1640. But, not to infift on this circum- 
ftance, Mofeley in his Addrefs to the Reader, fays, 
" y The author's more peculiar excellency in thefe 
ftudies was too well known to conceal his papers, or 
to keep me from attempting to Jbllicit them from 
him" So that Milton, we fee, had concealed thefe 
papers, till he was folicited to permit them, with 
Lycidas and Comus already printed, to appear in one 
volume. I muft obferve alio that Milton tells his 
friend Roufe, in prefenting to him this collection of 
his poems, that they were the productions of his 
f early youth. 

Milton, however, might compofe at Foreft Hill 
part of his later productions. Mr. Warton has aflerted 

x See before, pp. IS, 19, and my Preliminary Notes to 
L' Allegro and 11 Peflferofo. 

7 Milton's Poems, ed. 1645, 12 mo fign, a. 4. 
z " Gemelle cultu fimplici gaudens liber, 
" Fronde licet gemina, 
" Munditieque nitens non operosa; 
" Qucm man us attuiit 
" Juvemks olun, 
u Sedula tanien liaud nimii poeta;, Sec.*' 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 25 

that he did. I mention this on the authority of a 
* gentleman, whofe information indeed will highly 
intereft our curiofity, but at the fame time excite our 
forrow. 

" Milton married a daughter of Juftice Powell, (of Sandr 
ford in the vicinity of Oxford,) and lived in a houfe at Forefi 
Hill, about three miles from Sandford ; where., the late lau- 
reate Warton told me, Milton wrote a great part of his Pa- 
radije LoJ. Warton found a number of papers of Milton's 
own writing in that houfe, and alfo many of Juftice * Powell's ; 
which the late Mr. Crewe (father to the late Vifcountefs 
Falmouth) permitted him to take, and make what ufe of them 
he thought proper. The late Mr. Mickle tranflated part of 
Camoens's Lufiad in the fame houfe, he being at the time I 
vifited him a lodger in that houfe. Mr. Mickle married the 
daughter of Mr. Tomkins a farmer, the tenant to Mr. Crewe. 
The time I allude to of vinting my worthy friend Mickle was 
in 1772 and 1773. And my converfations, had with Mr. 
Warton and Mr. Crewe, were from 1781 to 1786." 

Our forrow cannot but be excited, when it is added 
that of Milton's papers no regular account appears to 
have been taken, and no defcription has been given. 
The c biographers of Warton and Mickle will be 
confulted in vain on this fubjec~b. 

A pretended romantick circumltance in Milton's 
younger days has been publickly mentioned, which 
has been fuppofed to have formed the firft impulfe 
of his Italian journey. In the General Evening Poll; 

a Thomas B. Richards, Efq. One of the Sub-CommifTioners 
under the prefent Record Commiffion for England. 

b See Mr. Warton's Notes on the Nuncupative Will of Milton, 
fubjoincd to this account of the Life and Writings of the poet. 

c The Rev. R. Mant's Life of T. Warton, and the Rev. J. Sim's 
Life of W. J. Mickle, prefixed to the Poetical Works of thofe 
authors. 



£6 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

in the Spring of 1789 it is fuppofed to have ap- 
peared; in which, or in any other journal, however, I 
had not been fo fortunate, before the firft edition of 
this account was publifhed, as to difcover it. The 
anecdote has fince been obligingly tranfmitted to me, 
exactly as it appeared in a News-paper, (the Italian 
citation only being here corrected,) of which the date 
does not appear; and for which I am indebted, 
through my friend Mr. Bindley, to M. Whifh, Efq. 

" Believing that the following real circumftance has been 
but little noticed, we fubmit the particulars of it, as not un- 
interesting, to the attention of our readers : — It is well known 
that, in the bloom of youth, and when he purfued his ftudies 
at Cambridge, this poet was extremely beautiful. Wandering, 
one day, during the fummer, far beyond the precin&s of the 
Univerlity, into the country, he became fo heated and fa- 
tigued, that, reclining himfelf at the foot of a tree to reft, he 
fliortly fell afleep. Before he awoke, two ladies, who were 
foreigners, pafled by in a carriage. Agreeably aftoniftied 
at the lovelinefs of his appearance, they alighted, and having 
admired him (as they thought) unperceived, for fome time, 
the youngeft, who was very handfome, drew a pencil from 
her pocket, and having written fome lines upon a piece of 
paper, put it with her trembling hand into his own. Imme- 
diately afterwards they proceeded on their journey. Some of 
his acquaintances, who were in fearch of him, had obferved 
this filent adventure, but at too great a diftance to difcover 
that the highly-favoured party in it was our illuftrious bard. 
Approaching nearer, they faw their friend, to whom, being 
awakened, they mentioned what had happened. Milton 
opened the paper, and, with furprize, read thefe vcrfes from 
Guarini : [Madrigal, xii. ed. 1598.] 

* Ocelli, Jlelk mortali, 

u Mini/Ire de mid mali,— 

" Se chiufi m uecidete, 
jperti chef arete f n 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. £7 

« Ye eyes ! ye human ftars ! ye authors of my livelier): 
pangs ! If thus, when fhut, ye wound me, what muft have 
proved the consequence had ye been open ?" Eager, from 
this moment, to find out the fair incognita, Milton tra- 
velled, but in vain, through every part of Italy. His poetick 
fervour became inceffantly more and more heated by the idea 
which he had formed of his unknown admirer ; and it is, in 
fome degree, to her that his own times, the prefent times, 
and the lateft posterity muft feel themfelves indebted for feverai 
of the moil impaffioned and charming compositions of the 
Paradife Loft." 

The preceding highly coloured relation, however, 
is not lingular. My friend Mr. Walker points out 
to me a counterpart in the following Extract from 
the Preface to PoeTies de Marguerite-Eleanore 
Clotilde, depuis Madame de Surville, Poete Fran^ 
cois du XV. Siecle. Paris, 1803. 

<e Juftine de L6vis fe promenoit dans une foret avec deux de 
fes parentes ; elles appercnrent un jeune chevalier endormi. 
Sa beaute frappe les trois jeunes amies ; Juftine furtout en 
regut une impreffion qui ne s'efTaga jamais. Elle ne put 
s'empecher de depofe fes tallettes aupres du bel inconnu, apres 
y avoir ecrit quatre vers Italiens qui fermoient une efpece de 
declaration : elle s'eloigna enfuite avec fes compagnes. On 
pent juger de retonnement du chevalier lorqu' a fon reveil il 
trouva ces tablettes et lut ce qu'elles contenoient. Louis de 
Puytendre (c'etoit fon nom) ne s'occupa plus que de la re- 
cherche de rinconnue : il parcourut inutilement l'ltalie en- 
tire ; il eut diverfes aventures, &c." 

Though credence will hardly be granted to the 
anecdote relpecting Milton, obligation is due to him 
v/ho publifhed it; inafmuch as thepublicatioi occa- 
fioned it to be clothed in the following elegant drefs : 
In fultry noon when youthful Milton lay 
Supinely ftretch'd beneath the poplar fliade, 
Lur'd by his Form, a fair Italian Maid 
Steals from her loitering chariot to furvey 



SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

The Numbering charms, that all her foul betray. 
Then, as coy fears th' admiring gaze upbraid, 
Starts ; — and thefe lines, with hurried pen pourtray'd. 
Slides in his half-clos'd hand ; — and fpeeds away.— 

Ye eyes, ye human ftars ! — if, thus conceal'd 
By ileep's foft veil, ye agitate my heart, 
Ah ! what had been its conflict if reveal'd 

Your rays had flione ! — Bright Nymph, thy ftrains impart 
Hopes, that impel the graceful Bard to rove, 
Seeking through Tufcan Vales his vifionary Love. 

He found her not ; — yet much the Poet found, 
To fwell imagination's golden ftore, 
On Arno's bank, and on that bloomy more, 
Warbling Parthenope ; in the wide bound, 

Where Rome's forlorn Campania fetches round 
Her ruin'd towers and temples ; — claffick lore 
Breathing fublimer fpirit from the power 
Of local confciouihefs. — Thrice happy wound, 

Given by his fleeping graces, as the Fair, 
Hung over them enamour'dj the defire 
Thy fond refult infpir'd, that wing'd him there, 

Where breath'd each Roman and each Tufcan lyre, 
Might haply fan the emulative flame, 
That rofe o'er Dante's fong, and rivall'd Maro's fame I 

Original Sonnets, &c. by Anna Seward, 1799, p« 76. 

On the death of his mother in 1637, he prevailed 
v\ith his father to permit him to vifit the continent, 
permiffion Mr. JIayley fuppoies to have been 
" the more readily granted, as one of his motives 
ifitblg Italy was to form a collection of Italian 
muliek." His nephew Phillips indeed relates, that, 
while at Venice, he (hipped a parcel of curious and 
rare books which he had collected in his travels; 
particularly a cheft or two of choice muliek-books of 
the beft mailers Aourifliing about that time in Italy. 
Having obtained fome directions for his travels from 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. £9 

Sir Henry Wotton, to whom he had communicated 
his d earneft defire of feeing foreign countries, he went 
in 1638, attended with a fingle fervant, to Paris; 
where, by the favour of Lord Scudamore, he was 
introduced to Grotius. Of this interview, although 
the numerous letters of Grotius afford no trace, Mil- 
ton's nephew gives the following account ; Grotius 
took the vifit kindly, and gave him entertainment 
fuitable to his worth and the high commendations he 
had heard of him. 

Having been prefented, by Lord Scudamore, with 
letters of recommendation to the Englifh merchants 
in the feveral places through which he intended to 
travel, he went, after ftaying a few days in Paris, 
directly to Nice, where he embarked for Genoa, 
From Genoa he proceeded to Leghorn, Pila, and 
Florence. The delights of Florence detained him 
there two months. His compofitions and convert 
fation were fo much admired, that he was a moll 
welcome gueft in the academies, (as in Italy the 
meetings of the moil polite and ingenious perfons are 
denominated,) held in that city. He has affection- 
ately recorded the e names of thefe Italian friends ; 

d See Sir Henry Wotton's Letter to him, and the Notes pre- 
fixed to Co?nus in this edition. 

e " Tui enim Jacobe Gaddi, Carole Dati, Frefcobalde, Cul- 
telline, Bommatthaee, Clementille, Francine, aliorumque plurium 
memoriam apud me Temper gratam, atque jucundam, nulla dies 
delebit." Defenf. fee. Profe-Works, vol. iii. p. 96. edit. 1698. 
It is to one of thefe friends that he profefles his love of the Italian 
language. " Ego certe iftis utrifque Unguis [Greek and Latin] 
non extremis tantummodd labris madidus; fed, fiquis alius, 
quantum per annos licuit, poculis majoribus prolutus, poffum 
tamen nonnunquam ad ilium Dantem, et Petrarcam, alio/que 



50 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

and has exprefled his obligations to their honourable 
diftinclions. Dati f prefented him with a Latin 
eulogy; and Francini with an Italian ode. A few 
years fince, Mr. Brand accidentally difcovered on a 
book-ftall, a manuscript which he purchafed, entitled 
La Tina, by Antonio Malatefti, not yet enumerated, 
fays g Mr. Warton, among Milton's friends. It is 
dedicated by the author to John Milton while at 
Florence. Mr. Brand gave it to Mr. Hollis, who, 
in 1758, fent it together with Milton's works, both 
in poetry and profe, and his Life by Toland, to the 
Academy Delia Crufca. The manufcript, as Mr. 
Warton obferves, would have been a greater curiofity 
in England. Milton became acquainted alfo with 
the celebrated Galileo, whom many biographers have 
reprefented as in prifon when the poet vifited him. 
But Mr. Walker has informed me that Galileo was 
never a prifoner in the inquifition at Florence, al- 
though a prifoner of it. On his arrival at Rome on 
February the 10th, 1632, that illuftrious philofopher 
had furrendered himfelf to Urban, who ordered him 
to be confined for his philofophical herefy in the 

\ejlm> comphtfeuhs, libenter et cupide comeflatum ire." Epift. 
B. Bommathao. Profe-Works, vol. iii. p. 325. ed. 1698. 

f Itolli has made the following remark on the commendatory 
notices of his countrymen. " OfTervifli nclle lodi dagl* Italiani 
date a quefto grand Uomo ; com' efli fin d' allora fcorgevano in 
lui 1' aha forza d' Ingegno che lo portava al primo Auge di gloria 
letteraria nel fuo Secolo c nella fua Nazione; e gliene facevano 
gli avverati I'rognoftici." Vita di Milton, 1735. Dennis pays 
much compliment to the difcernment of the Italians who dif- 
COvered| while Milton was among them, his great and growing 
geniut. Set- his Original Letters, &c. 1721, vol. i. p. 78, 80. 

k Milton's Smaller Poems, 2d edit. p. 555. But Milton mo- 
tions this friend in a letter to Carlo Dati, Epift. Turn. x. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 31 

palace of the Trinita de' Monti. Here he remained 
five months. Having retracted his opinion, he was 
difmifled from Rome ; and the houfe of Monfignor 
Piccolomini in Sienna was affigned to him as his 
prifon. About the beginning of December, in 1633, 
he was liberated ; and returned to the village of Bel- 
loguardo near Florence, whence he went to Arcetri, 
where, it is probable, he received the vifit of the 
Englilh bard. Milton himfelf has informed us that 
he had really feen Galileo ; and Rolli, in his Life of 
the poet, h confiders lbme ideas in the Paradife LoJl 9 
approaching towards the Newtonian philofophy, to 
have been caught at Florence from Galileo or his 
difciples. 

From Florence he palTed through Sienna to Rome, 
where he alio ftayed two months ; feafting, as Dr. 
Newton well obferves, both his eyes and his mind, 
and delighted with the fine paintings, and fculptures, 
and other rarities and antiquities, of the city. It has 
been judicioufly conjectured, that feveral of the im- 
mortal works of the flneft painters and itatuaries may 
be traced in Milton's poetry. They are fuppofed by 
Mr. Hayley to have had confiderable influence in 
attaching his imagination to our firft parents. " He 
had moft probably contemplated them," the elegant 
writer continues, " not only in the colours of Michael 
Angelo, who decorated Rome with his picture of the 
creation, but in the marble of Bandinelli, who had 
executed two large ftatues of Adam and Eve, which, 
though they were far from fatisfying the tafte of con- 

h " In Firenze cortamente egli apprefe dagli Scritti e dalle 
Maffimc del Galileo invalorite gia ne' di lui Seguaci, quelle No- 
zioni filofofiche fparfe . poi nel Poema, che tanto fi uniforraano 
ai Siftema del Cavalier Newton/' Vita, &c. 1735. 



3C SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

noitTeurs, might ftimulate even by their imperfections 
the genius of a poet." The deicription of the creation 
in the third book of Paradifc Lojl, (ver. 708, 719,) 
is fuppofed by * Mr, Walker to be copied from the 
fame fubjecl; as treated by Raphael in the gallery of 
the Vatican, called " la Bibbia di Raffaello." There 
are indeed feveral interefting pictures relating to 
Adam and Eve in the Florence collection, together 
with " the fall of Lucifer" fuppofed to be the work 
of Michael Angrelo, which Milton might have alio 
feen. Mr. Dunfter ingenioufly k conjectures the Pa- 
radife Regained to have been enriched by the fuggef- 
tions of Salvator Rofas mafterly painting oiTlieTemp- 
tation. The genius of Milton feems indeed to have 
refembled more particularly that of Michael Angelo. 
It is worthy of notice, as it mows a ftrong coincidence 
of tafte in the poet and the painter, that Michael 
Angelo was particularly ftruck with Dante; and that 
he is faid to have ' iketched with a pen, on the margin 
of his copy of the Inferno, every ftriking fcene of 
the terrible and the pathetick; but this valuable 
curiofity was unfortunately loft in a fhipwreck. The 
learned author of " Tableaux tires de 1" Iliade, de 
T ( )dyfsee d' Homcre, et de V Eneide de Virgile," was 
never more miftakcn than in fuppofing the Paradifc 
Loft incapable of fapplying an artiit with fcenes as 
graceful and fublime as can be met with in the poems 
of the Grecian and Roman bards: for, in the words 
of Mr. Hayley, there is no charm exhibited by 
painting which Milton's poetry has failed to equal, 

1 Hiii. Mem. on Italian Tragedy, p. iC6. 
; Addition to his edit, ol" Var. Reg. 1800. 

\ s k<t( li of the Lives and Writings of Dante and 
trchj 1790." ]). 31. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 33 

as far as analogy between the different arts can extend 
Indeed the numerous exercifes for the painter's (kill, 
which Milton's works afford, have, in later times, 
commanded due attention ; and Fufeli, by his happy 
iketches from fuch originals, has taught us how to ad- 
mire poetry and painting " breathing united force." 

At Rome Milton was honoured with the acquaint- 
ance of feveral learned men, more efpecially with 
that of Holitenius, keeper of the Vatican library. 
By him he was introduced to Cardinal Barberini, 
the m patron Cardinal of the Engliih ; who, at an 
11 entertainment of mulick, performed at his own ex- 

m I learn from the manufcript of Dr. Bargrave, (preferved in 
the Library of Canterbury Cathedral,) of which an ample ac- 
count is given in my Note on Milton's Epigram to Chriflina, 
Queen of Sweden, that, " at Rome, euery forraigne Nation 
hath fome Cardinall or other to be their peculiar Gardian : when 
I was 4 feuerall times at Rome," fays Dr. Bargrave, " this Car- 
dinall Barberini was Gardian to the Eng!(/h." He adds, " When 
I was at Rome with the Earlc of Chefterfield, then under my 
tuition, 1650, at a yeare of Jubile, this Cardinall (formerly kinde 
to me) would not admitt my lord or myfelie to any audience, 
though, in eleuen months time, tryed feuerall times : and I heard 
that it was, beeaufe that we had recommendatory letters from 
our Queen Mother to Cardinall Capponius, and another from 
the Dutchefs of Sauoy to Cardinall Penzirolo ; and no letters 
to him, who was the Englijh (I fay Resells) Pruteclor ; and 
that we vifited them before him." 

n See the notes on Milton's poem, Ad Leonoram Romce ca?ien- 
tern; in the firft of which, it is related by Mr. VVarton that Mil- 
ton heard the accomplished Leonora Baroni fmg at the concerts 
of this Cardinal, and that there is a volume of Greek, Latin, 
Italian, French, and Spanifh poems, printed at Rome, in praife 
of this lady. I have fought in vain for this curious volume ; as 
have two or three literary friends, both abroad and at home. I 
rauft obferve however that this book is defcribed, in the Barberini 
collection, as printed at Bracciano, Index Bib. Barberin. foL 
1681. torn. i. p, 114. 

vol.i. D 



34 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

pence, waited for him at the door, and condefcended 
to lead him into the aflemblv. Milton did not forget 
the extraordinary civilities of this accomplifhed Car- 
dinal. In thanking Holttenius afterwards for all his 
favours to him, he adds ° " De caetero, novo beneficio 
devinxeris, li p Eminentiffimum Cardinalem quanta 
poteit oblervantia meo nomine falutes, cujus magna? 
virtutes, recHque ltudium, ad pravehendas item omnes 
artes liberales egregie comparatum, femper mihi ob 
oculos verfatur." At Rome alfo, Selvaggi and Saliilli 
praifed the attainments of Milton in thofe verfes, 
yhich are prefixed to his Latin poetry. 

He next removed to Naples, in company with a 
hermit ; to whom Milton owed his introduction to 

• Lit. Lucoe Holftenio, dat. Florcnt. Mart. 30. l6o9, Profe- 
Wbrks, vol. iii. p. 327. edit. l6$8. 

P Milton, it may be obferved, is careful not to omit the title 
firft applied to the Cardinals by Barberini : fmcc whole time, Dr. 
Bargraye relates, *' the title of Padrone continueth to the Pope's 
chiefe Nephew, and the title of Eminenza to all the Cardinalls. 
Indeed the authority which Urban VIII. gave to Francifco 
[Barberini, his elded Nephew,] was not ordinary ; for he thought 
it not enough to giue the powrc, except he gaue it the vanety and 
title of Padrone, that is, Mailer and Lord, a title never heard of 
before at Home. But Urban had nothing in his mouth but the 
Cardinal! Padrone: Where is theCardinall Padrone? Call the 
Cardinal! Padrone: Speake to theCardinall Padrone: Nothing 
was heard of but theCardinall Padrone; which the cmbafladors 
of Princes did not like, faying they had no Padrone but the Pope 
himfelfe. Howeuer theire [the Barberinis'] ambition ftayed not 
at this title : they tooke exceptions of the quality of Illulhillimo, 
with which hitherto the Cardinalls had binn content for lb many 
ages. The title of Excellency belonging to foveraine Princes in 
Italy, they lirovc to find out fomething that Ihould not be in- 
ieriour to ii ; and, c;in\afmg many titles, at length they pitched 
upon Eminc/ici/, which the Princes hearing of, they took upon 
themfclves the title of Highaeffe" MS. as before. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 35 

the patron of Taffo, Manfo, marquis of Villa, a 
nobleman diftinguifhed by his virtue and his learning. 
To this eminent perfon he was obliged in many im- 
portant initances ; and, as a teftimony of gratitude, 
he prefented to him, at his departure from Naples, 
his beautiful eclogue, entitled Manfus ; which Dr. 
Johnfon acknowledges muft have raifed in the noble 
Italian an high opinion of Englifh elegance and litera- 
ture. Manfo likewife has addreffed a diftich to 
Milton, which is prefixed to the Latin poems. 

From Naples Milton intended to proceed to Sicily 
and Athens : 

<c Countries/' as Mr. Warton has excellently obferved, 
9 " connected with his finer feelings, interwoven with his 
poetical ideas, and impreffed upon his imagination by his 
habits of reading, and by long and intimate converfe with 
the Grecian literature. But fo prevalent were his patriotick 
attachments, that, hearing in Italy of the commencement of 
the national quarrel, inftead of proceeding forward to feaft 
his fancy with the contemplation of fcenes familiar to Theo- 
critus and Homer, the pines of Etna and the paftures of 
Peneus, he abruptly changed his courfe, and haftily returned 
home to plead the caufe of ideal liberty. Yet in this chaos 
of controverfy, amidft endlefs difputes concerning religious 
and political reformation, independency, prelacy, tithes, to- 
leration, and tyranny, he fometimes feems to have heaved a 
figh for the peaceable enjoyments of lettered folitude, for his 
congenial purfuits, and the more mild and ingenuous exer- 
cifes of the mufe. In a Letter to Henry Oldenburgh, written 
in 1654, he fays, r * Hoc cum libertatis adverfariis inopina- 
tum certamen, diverjis longe et am<z?iioribus omnin6 me 
ftudiis intentum, ad fe rapuit invitwn.' And in one of his 
profe-tra&s, s ' I may one day hope to have ye again in a 

* Preface to his Edition of the Smaller Poems. 

* Profe- Works, vol. hi. p. 330. ed. l6<?8. 
8 Apol. Smeaymn, 1642. 

D 2 



36 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

ftill time, when there mall be no Chiding. Not in thefe 
Noifes/ And in another, having mentioned fome of his 
fchemes for epick poetry and tragedy, ' of higheft hope and 
hardeft attempting he adds, * ' With what fmall willingnefs 
I endure to interrupt the purfuit of no lefs hopes than thefe, 
and leave a calm and pleating folitarineffe, fed with cheerful 
and confident thoughts, to imbark in a troubled fea of noifes 
and hoarfe difputes, from beholding the bright countenance 
of Truth in the quiet and ftill air of delightfull itudies, &c.' 
He ftill, however, obftinately perfrfted in what he thought his 
duty. But finely thefe fpeculations mould have been con- 
signed to the enthufiafts of the age, to fuch reillefs and way- 
ward fpirits as Piynne, Hugh Peters, Goodwyn, and Baxter. 
Minds lefs refined, and faculties lefs elegantly cultivated, 
would have been better employed in this talk : 

( Coarfe complexions, 

* And cheeks of forry grain, will ferve to ply 

f The fampltr, and to teafe the hufvvife's wool: 

' What need a vermeil-t'mclur'd lip for that, 

1 Love- darting eyes, and treffes like the morn V — " 

He returned by the way of Rome, though fome 
mercantile friends had acquainted him that the Jefuits 
there were forming plots againft him, for the liberty 
of his converfation upon matters of religion. He 
paid little attention to the u advice of his friend Sir 
Henry Wotton, " to keep his thoughts clofe, and his 
countenance open." Nor did the liberal and poliihed 
Manfo omit to acquaint him, at his departure, that 
he would have mown him more confiderable favours, 
if his conduct 'had been lefs unguarded. He is fup- 
pofed to have given offence by having vffited Galileo. 
And lie had been with difficulty reftrained from pub- 
licity aflertingj within the verge of the Vatican, the. 

' Church-Goverom. B. ii. 1 641. ■ 

t the Prelim, Notes to Camus, in this edition. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 37 

caufe of Proteftantifm. While Milton, however, de- 
fended his principles without hypociify, he appears 
not to have courted conteit. When he was queftioned 
as to his faith, he was too honeft to conceal his fen- 
timents, too dauntlefs to relinquifh them. He ftaid 
at Rome two months more without fear, and indeed 
without moleftation. From Rome he proceeded to 
Florence, where he was received with the moil lively 
marks of affection by his friends, and made a fecond 
reiidence of two months. From Florence he vifited 
Lucca : Then crofting the Apennine, he paired by the 
way of Bologna and Ferrara to Venice, in which city- 
he fpent a month. From Venice he took his courie 
through Verona, Milan, and along the lake Leman, 
to Geneva. After fpending fome time in this city, 
where he became acquainted with w Giovanni Deo- 
dati, and Frederick Spanheim, he returned through 
France, and came home after an abfence of fifteen 
months. Mr. Hayley has admirably obferved, that, 
" in the relation which Milton gives himfelf of his 
return, the name of Qeneva recalling to his mind one 
of the molt flanderous of his political adverfaries, he 
animates his narrative by a folemn appeal to Heaven 
on his unfpotted integrity; he protelts that, during 
his reiidence in foreign fcenes, where licentioumefs 
was univerfal, hu own conduct was perfectly irre- 
proachable. I dwell the more zealbuily on whatever 
may elucidate the moral character of Milton; becaufe, 
even among thofe who love and revere him, the 
fplendour of the poet has in fome meafure eclipfed 
the merit of the man ; but in proportion as the par- 
ticulars of his life are itudied with intelligence and 

w See the Notes on Epitaph, "Dam, 



38 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

candour, his virtue will became, as it ought to be, 
the friendly rival of his genius, and receive its due 
ihare of admiration and efteem." 

His return happened about the time of the King's 
fecond expedition againft the Scots, in which his 
forces under lord Conway were defeated by general 
Lefley, in the month of Auguit 1639. In a Bible, 
x laid to have been once in his poffeiTion, (probably 
the conftant companion of his travels,) is a manu- 
fcript remark, dated 1639 at Canterbury city, which 
may ferve to mow the powerful impreffion made on 
his mind, (admitting the authenticity of the remark,) 
by this eventful period. " This year of very dread- 
ful commotion, and I weene will enfue murderous 
times of conflicting fight." The date of the year 
and place may lead us to fuppofe that, having landed 
at Dover, he was on his return from his travels to 
London. The gentleman, who communicated the 
intelligence of this Bible to the publick, and had 
been indulged with a fight of it, felected other mar- 
ginal obfervations which appeared to him remark- 
able ; among which is the following poetical note 
on I. Maccab. xiv. 16. " Now when it was heard at 
Rome, and as far as Sparta, that Jonathan was 
dead, they were very forry :" 

** When that day of death fhall come, 
* Then fhall nightly (hades prevaile ; 
tc Soon fhall love and mufick faile ; 
" Soone the frefh turfe's tender blade 
" Shall iloiirifli on my fleepingfhade. ,> 

* Gentleman's Magazine, July 1792, p« 6l5. And I learn, 
from the obliging information of Mr. Nichols, that this Bible 
is now in t he poftrfTion of the Rev. Mr. Blackburn, fun of the 
late Archdeacon Blackburn who wrote the Remarks on Dr. 
Johnfon's, Life of Milton, l2 ,no Lond. 1/80, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 39 

The authenticity of the remarks, and of the Bible 
having belonged to Milton, has indeed been y ques- 
tioned ; but has been defended not without confider- 
able force, by the communicator himfelf, and by 
other writers in the valuable mifcellany, in which the 
information has been given; to the demonftrations 
and conjectures of -whom I refer the reader 2 . 

Before we attend to the bufier fcenes of life, in 
which Milton, now returned to his native country, 
became engaged; let me be permitted to lament 
that he never executed the fcheme, which he once 
propofed to himfelf in his animated lines to Manfb, 
of a " embeliifhing original tales of chivalry, of cloth- 
ing the fabulous achievements of the early Britiih 
kings and champions in the gorgeous trappings of 
epick attire," The delight which he had derived 
from the military tales of Italy now perhaps funk into 
neglect; though never into forgetfulnefs. In his lateft 
poems he feems to look back, not without an eye of 
fond regard, to the more diftinguimed compofitions 
of this kind; and certainly with ample teftimony of 
the attention, with which he had itudied (to ufe his 
own words) " thofe lofty fables and romances that 
recount in folemn cantos the deeds of knighthood \" 

At his return he heard of the death of his beloved 
friend and fchoolfellow, Charles Diodati. And he 
lamented his lofs in that elegant eclogue, the Epita- 

y Gent. Mag. Sept. 1792, p. 789. 

2 Gent. Mag. Otf. 1792, p. 900. And Ibid. Gent. Mag. 
February 1793, p. 106. Gent. Mag. March 1800, p. 199. 

* See Mr. Warton's Preface to the Smaller Poems. 

b See particularly P, L. B. i. 579, &c. P. R. B. iii. 336, Sec. 



40 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

phium Damo)iis, which Mr. Warton has fuccefsfully 
defended a^ainit the cold remark of Dr. Johnibn c . 

He now hired a lodging in St. Bride's Church-yard, 
Fleet-itreet ; where he undertook the education of his 
lifters lions, John and Edward Phillips, d " the firft 
ten, the other nine years of age; and in a year's 
time made them capable of interpreting a Latin 
author at light." Finding his houfe not fufficiently 
large for his library and furniture, he took a hand- 
fome e garden-houfe in Alderfgate-ftreet, fituated at 
the end of an entry, that he might avoid the noife 
and dilturbance of the ftreet. Here he received into 
his houfe a few more pupils, the fons of f his moft 
intimate friends ; and he proceeded, with cheerful- 
nefs, in the nobleft employment of mankind, that of 
initructing others in knowledge and virtue. " As 
he was fevere on one hand," fays Aubrey, " fo he 
was moft familiar and free in his converfation to thofe 

c Note at the end of the poem. 

d Aubrey's MS. 

e From the Note figned II. in Dr. Johnfon's Life of Milton, 
Lives of the Poets, ed. 1794-, vol. i. p. 130, it appears, that there 
were many of thefe garden-hou/et^ i. e. houfes fituated in a garden, 
efpeciallv in the north fuburbs of London; and that the term is 
technical, frequently occurring in the Athen. and Fa ft. Oxon. 
The annotator adds, that the meaning may be collected from 
the article Thomas Farnabe, the famous fchoolmafter; of whom 
the author fays, that he taught in Goldfmith's-rents, in Cripple- 
gate pariih, behind Redcrok-ftreet, where were large gardens and 
handfome houfes: Milton's houfe in Jewin-itreet was alfo a 
garden-houjty as were indeed moil of his dwellings after his {q\~ 
tlement in London. 

f See the laft Note on Lawes's Dedication of Comus to Lord 

F- ruck by 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 41 

whom he muft ferve in his way of education." His 
younger nephew has related the method of his in- 
struction, and the books employed, Of the Latin, 
the four authors concerning hufbandry, Cato, Varro, 
Columella, and Palladius ; Cornelius Celfus, the 
phyucian; a great part of Pliny's natural hiftory; 
the Architecture of Vitruvius ; the Stratagems of 
Frontinus ; and the philofophical poets, Lucretius 
and Manilius. Of the Greek, Hefiod; Aratus's 
Phenomena and Diofemeia ; Dionyfius Afer de fitu 
orbis ; Oppian's Cynegeticks and Halieuticks ; Quin 
tus Calaber's poem of the Trojan war, continued 
from Homer; Apollonius Rhodius's Argonauticks ; 
and in profe Plutarch's Placita philofophorum, and 
of the Education of children; XenophonV Cyro- 
pa?dia and Anabafis ; JElian's Tacticks ; and the 
Stratagems of Polyaenus. Nor did this application 
to the Greek and Latin tongues impede the cultiva- 
tion of the chief oriental languages, the Hebrew, 
Chaldee, and Syriack, lb far as to go through the 
Pentateuch, to make a good entrance into the Tar- 
gum or Chaldee paraphrafe, and to underftand fe- 
veral chapters of St. Matthew in the Syriack Tefta- 
ment; befides the modern languages, Italian and 
French ; and a knowledge of mathematicks and aftro- 
nomy. The Sunday exercife of his pupils was, prin- 
cipally, to read a chapter of the Greek Teftament, 
and to hear his learned expofition of it: to which 
was added the writing, from his dictation, fome part 
of a fyftem of divinity, which he had collected from 
the ableft divines who had written upon the fubjecl. 
From the rigid attention which fuch a fyftem required 
he occafionally relaxed ; and once in three or four 



42 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

weeks the hard itudy and fpare diet, of which he was 
an eminent example to his pupils, gave way to the 
regale of a gaudy day with fome young gentlemen 
of his acquaintance ; the chief of whom, fays 
his nephew, were Mr. Alphry and Mr. Miller, the 
beaus of thofe times, but nothing near fo bad as thofe 
now-a-days !" Thefe were the feafons in which Milton 
" refolved to drench in mirth that, after, no repent- 
ing draws," and in which he would not forfeit his 
pretenfions of admiflion into the train of the true 
Euphrofyne : 

" In thy right hand lead with thee 

" The mountain-nymph, fweet Liberty ; 
u And, if I give thee hononr due, 
" Mirth, admit me of thy crew ; 
" To live with her, and live with thee, 
u In unreproved pleajures free." 

It feems uncandid in Dr. Johnfon to have ridiculed 
the academick inftitutions of Milton with the title of 
the " wonder-working academy," becaufe no man 
very eminent for knowledge proceeded from it, and 
becaufe Philips's fmall hiitory of poetry, as he g inac- 
curately ftates, is its only genuine product. The 
merit of Milton's intention cannot be denied, however 
the mode of education, which he purfued, may per- 
haps be juftly thought impracticable. His nephew, 
with great fpirit and affection, obferves that, if his 
pupils h " had received his documents with the fame 
acutenefs of wit and apprehenfion, the fame induftry, 
alacrity, and thirft after knowledge, as the Inftru&or 
was endued with, what prodigies of wit and learning 

« See this point further difcufled in the prefent Account. 
* Life of Milton, p. xix. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 43 

might they have proved ! The fcholars might in fome 
degree, have come near to the equalling of the 
Mafter, or at leaft have in fome fort made good 
what he feems to predict in the clofe of an elegy he 
made in the feventeenth year of his age, upon the 
death of one of his filter's children, a daughter, who 
died in her infancy : 

Then thou, the mother of fo fweet a child, 
Her falfe-imagin'd lofs ceafe to lament, 
And wifely learn to curb thy forrows wild ; 
This if thou do, he will an offspring give, 
That, to the world's laft end, mall make thy name to live. J> 

But, though thus employed in the education of 
youth, Milton now began to facrifice his time to the 
harm and crabbed employment of controverfy. In 
In 1641 the clamour ran high againft the bifhops, 
and in that clamour he joined, by publiihing a treatife 
Of Reformation, in two books ; being willing to affift 
the Puritans in their defigns againft the eftabliihed 
Church, who, as he informs us in his Second De- 
fence, were inferiour to the bifhops in learning. We 
are to re coll eel; that Milton had before attacked the 
epifcopal clergy, and had even anticipated the exe- 
cution of Archbifhop Laud, in his Lycidas, written 
before he was twenty-nine years old. The antipathy, 
then clothed in an allegorick veil, now burft into 
expreffions of elaborate and undifguifed inveclive, 
Of the innovations, caufed in the ceremonies of the 
Church by Laud, and which excited the animad- 
version of Milton, it may not be improper here to 
obferve, that it has been * faid by a great fcholar, 

* See the Europ. Magazine, vol. xxviii. p. 379* 



U SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

and moft excellent hiftorian in ecclefiaftical no lefe 
tlian in civil matters, that every ceremony, of which 
Laud enforced the obfervation, is to be found in the 
ritual of Andrews, biihop of Winchefter, who was 
ityled the antipapiftical prelate. Laud, in his fpeech 
delivered at the Star-Chamber, when he paffed judg- 
ment on Baltwick, Burton, and Prynne, thus vindi- 
cates himfelf, p- 4, &c. ka I can fay it clearly and 
truly as in the prefence of God, I have done no- 
thing, as a prelate, to the uttermoft of what I am 
confcious, but with a fingle heart, and with a fincere 
intention for the good government and honour of the 
Church, and the maintenance of the orthodox truth 
and religion of Chrift profeffed, eftablifhed, and main- 
tained in this Church of England. For my care of 
this Church, the reducing of it into order, the up- 
holding of the externall worfhip of God in it, and 
the fetling of it to trie rules of its firft reformation, 
are the caufes (and the fole caufcs, whatever are 
pretended,) of this malicious Jiorme, which hath 
lowered fo black upon ?ne, and fome of my brethren. 
And in the meane time they, which are the only or 
the chief innovators of the Chriftian world, having 
nothing to fay, accufe us of innovation ; they them- 
felves and their complices in the meane time being 
the greateji innovators that the Chriftian world hath 
ulmoft ever known. I deny not but others have 

k " A Speech delivered tn the Starrc-Chamber, on Wednefday 
the \iv' h of June, MDCXXXVII, at the cenfureof John Baftwick, 
Henry Burton, and William Prinn ; concerning pretended Inno- 
vations in the Church. % the moft reverend father in God, 
William, L. Archlalhop of Canterbury. London, printed by 
)! Badger, i0'37." 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 45 

fpread more dangerous errors in the Church of 
Chrifl ; but no men, in any age of it, have been 
more guilty of innovation than they, while themfelves 
cry out againft it : Quis tulerit Gracchos ? And I 
faid wel, Quis tulerit Gracchos ? For 'tis moft ap- 
parent to any man that will not winke, that the in- 
tention of thefe men, and their abettors, was and is 
to raife afedition ; being as great incendiaries in the 
State (where they get power) as they have ever 
been in the Church; Novatian himfelfe hardly 
greater. Our maine crime is (would they all fpeake 
out, as fome of them do,) that we are bifhops ; were 
we not fo, fome of us might be as paflable as other 
men." To thole, who would examine attentively the 
ecclefiaftical controverfy of this period, I recommend 
the perufal of the whole fpeech. 

In 1641, the eloquent Hall, bifhop of Norwich, 
having publiihed an Humble Remonftrance in favour 
of Epifcopacy, five minifters, under the title of 
Smeclymnuus, a word formed from the firft letters of 
their 1 names, wrote an Anfwer ; of which Arch- 
bifhop Ufher publifhed a Confutation. To this 
Confutation Milton replied in his Treatile Of Pre- 
latical Epifcopacy. And, although he has ungrace- 
fully claffed the archbifhop's Confutation with " fome 
late treatifes, one whereof goes under the name of 
James, Lord Bifhop of Armagh," he has, in his next 
publication, complimented the excellent prelate for 

1 Stephen Marfhail, Edmund Calamy, Thomas Young (Mil- 
ton's preceptor), Matthew Newcomen, and William Spurftow, 
the initial letter of whofe Chriftian name is quaintly divided, in 
order to produce this celebrated word ! This is to be enumerated 
among the few playful tricks of fanaticifm. 



46 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

his learning. With fuch an adverfary as Ufher, in* 
deed, which of the Smeclymnuans would have dared 
to cope? This enterpriie none could partake with 
Milton. Vehement as he was in his reply to the 
two biihops, he alio enlarged this topick of purita- 
nical zeal in another performance, entitled The Rea- 
fon of Church Government urged again/I Prelacy y 
in two books. And, bilhop Hall having publilhed 
A Defence of the Humble Re?nonf ranee, he wrote 
Animadverfions upon it. Thefe treatifes were the 
fruits of his prejudice againft the eftabliihed Church- 
in 1641. From the third treatife, The Reafon of 
Church Government , we derive fome knowledge of 
his literary projects, and of the opinion he enter- 
tained of his own abilities ; expreffed, as Dr. John- 
fon well obferves, not with oftentatious exultation, 
but with calm confidence ; with a promife to under- 
take fomething, he yet knows not what, that may be 
of ufe and honour to his country. The whole paf- 
fage, from which Dr. Johnfon has cited a fmall part 
as a fervid, pious, and rational pledge of the Pa- 
radlfe Loft, however well known to the admirers of 
the poet, is too fublime and interefting to be read 
again and again without renewed and encreafed 
delight. 

" m Time ferves not now, and, perhaps, I might feem too 
profufe to give any certain account of what the mind at home*, 
in the fpacious circuits of her mufmg, hath liberty to propofe 
to herfelf, though of highelt hope and hardeft attempting ; 
whether that epick form, whereof the two poems of Homer, 
and thofe other two of Virgil and Taflb, are a diffufe, and 

° Introduction to the fecoud Book, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 47 

the book of Job a brief, model ; or whether the rules of 
Ariftotle herein are ftricUy to be kept, or nature to be fol- 
lowed ; which in them that know art, and ufe judgement, is 
no tranfgrefiion, but an enriching of art: and laftly, what 
king or knight, before the Conqueft, might be chofen, in 
whom to lay the pattern of a chriftian hero. And as Taffo 
gave to a prince of Italy his choice, whether he would com- 
mand him to write of Godfrey's expedition againft the in- 
fidels, Belifarius againft the Goths, or Charlemain againft 
the Lombards ; if to the inftin6fc of nature, and the embold- 
ening of art, aught may be trufted, and that there be nothing 
adverfe in our climate, or the fate of this age, it haply would 
be no raftmefs, from an equal diligence and inclination, to 
prefent the like offer in our ancient flories. Or whether thofe 
dramatick conftitutions, wherein Sophocles and Euripides 
reign, mall be found more doctrinal and exemplary to a na- 
tion. — Or, if occafion fhall lead, to imitate thofe magnifick 
odes and hymns, wherein Pindarus and Callimachus are in 
moil things worthy. But thofe frequent fongs throughout 
the Law and Prophets, beyond all thefe, not in their divine 
argument alone, but in the very critical art of compofition, 
may be eafily made appear over all the kinds of lyrick poeiy 
to be incomparable. Thefe abilities, wherefoever they be 
found, are the infpired gift of God, rarely bellowed, but yet 
to fome (though moft abufe) in every nation ; and are of 
power, befides the office of a pulpit, to inbreed and cherifh 
in a great people the feeds of virtue and publick civility, to 
allay the perturbations of the mind, and fet the affeclions in 
right tune ; to celebrate in glorious and lofty hymns the throne 
and equipage of God's Almightinefs, and what he works, and 
what he fuffers to be wrought, with high providence in his 
church ; to ling victorious agonies of martyrs and faints, the 
deeds and triumphs of juft and pious nations doiug valiantly 
through faith againft the enemies of Chrift ; to deplore the 
general relapfes of kingdoms and ftates from juftice and 
God's true worfhip. Laftly, whatfoever in religion is holy 
and fublime, in virtue amiable or grave, whatfoever hath 



48 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

pafiion or admiration in all the changes of that, which is 
called fortune from without, or the wily fubtleties and re- 
fluxes of man's thoughts from within ; all thefe things, with 
a folid and treatable fmoothnefs to paint out and defcribe, 
teaching over the whole book of fanclity and virtue, through 
all the inftances of example, with fuch delight, to thofe efpe- 
cially of foft and delicious temper, who will not fo much as 
look upon Truth herfelf, unlefs they fee her elegantly dreft ; 
that whereas the paths of honefty and good life appear now 
rugged and difficult, though they be indeed eafy and pleafant, 
they will then appear to all men both eafy and pleafant, 
though they were rugged and difficult indeed. — 

" The thing which I had to fay, and thofe intentions, 
which have lived within me ever fince I could conceive my- 
felf any thing worth to my country, I return to crave excufe 
that urgent reafon hath pluckt from me by an abortive and 
fore-dated difcovery ; and the aceomplifhment of them lies 
not but in a power above man's to promife ; but that none 
hath by more ftudious ways endeavoured, and with more un- 
wearied fpirit that none mall, that I dare almoft aver of my- 
felf, as far as life and free leifure will extend. Neither do I 
think it (hame to covenant with any knowing reader that for 
'fome few years yet I may go on truft with him toward the 
payment of what I am now indebted, as being a work not to 
be railed from the heat of youth, or the vapours of wine, 
like that which flows at wafte from the pen of fome vulgar 
amorift, or the trencher fury of a riming parafite; nor to 
be obtained by the invocation of dame Memory and her Siren 
daughters ; but by devout prayer to that eternal Spirit, who 
can enrich with all utterance and knowledge, and fends out 
his Seraphim with the hallowed Are of his altar to touch and 
purify the lips of whom he pleafes : to this muft be added in- 
dubious and felecl reading, fteady observation, inflght into 
all ft-emly and generous arts and affairs; till which in fome 
meafure be compafled, at mine own peril and coft I rcfufe not 
to fuitain this expectation from as many as are not loth to 
hazard fo much credulity upon the beft pledges that I can give 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 49 

them. Although it nothing content me to have difclofed 
thus much before hand ; but that I trull hereby to make it 
manifeft with what fmall willingnefs I endure to interrupt the 
purfuit of no lefs hopes than thefe, and leave a calm and 
pleafmg folitarinefs, fed with cheerful and confident thoughts, 
to imbark in a troubled fea of noife and hoarfe difputes, put 
from beholding the bright countenance of Truth, in the quiet 
and ftill air of delightfull ftudies." 

In 1642 he clofed the controverfy with an Apology 
for Sme&ymnuus, in anfwer to the Confutation of 
his Animadverjions, written, as he fuppofed, by bifhop 
Hall or his fon. He thought all this while, fays 
Dr. Newton, that he was vindicating eccleiiaftical 
liberty. Yet he has confeffed, that he was not difpofed 
to " h this manner of writing, wherein knowing myfelf 
inferiour to myfelf, led by the genial power of nature 
to another talk, I have the ufe, as I may account it, 
but of my left hand. 1 ' This left hand, indeed, has 
recorded too many fentiments which we mult reject, 
too many expreffions which we muft lament. By his 
afperity the repuliive form of puritanifm is rendered 
more hideous and diigufting, and the caufe which he 
would fupport is weakened. . 

At Whitfuntide in 1643, and in his thirty-fifth year, 
(as I have before obferved,) he married Mary, the 
daughter of Richard Powell, a gentleman who refided 
at Foreft Hill near Shotover in Oxfordfhire, and was 
a juftice of the peace for the county. He brought his 
bride to London ; who, after living only a few w r eeks 
with him, obtained his confent to accept the invitation 
of her friends to fpend the remaining part of the fum- 

h Introduclion to the fecond Book of his Reafon of Church 
Government. 

vol. 1, E 



50 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

mer with them in the country. He gave her per- 
million to ftay till Michaelmas ; but fhe declined to 
return at the expiration of that period. The viiit 
to her friends was, in fact, only a pretence for con- 
jugal defertion. This defertion has been imputed, 
by Phillips, to the different principles of the two 
families. Her relations, he tells us, " being gene- 
rally addicted to the Cavalier party, and fome of 
them poffibly ingaged, in the King's fervice, (who by 
this time had his head quarters at Oxford, and was 
in fome profpecT; of fuccefs,) they began to repent 
them of having matched the eldeft daughter of the 
family to a perfon ib contrary to them in opinion ; 
and thought it would be a blot in their efcutcheon, 
whenever that Court ihould come to flouriih a^ain : 
however, it ib incenfed our author, that he thought it 
would be difhonourable ever to receive her again 
after fuch a rcpulfe." The fame biographer intimates, 
that fhe was averfe to the philofophick life of Milton, 
and fighed for the uairth and jovialnefs to which fhe 
had been accuftomed in Oxfordfhire. And Aubrey 
relates, that fhe " ° was brought up and bred where 
there was a great deal of company and merriment, 
as dancing, &c. ; and, when fhe came to live with 
her hufband, fhe found it folitary, no company came 
to her, and flic often heard her nephews cry and be 
beaten. This life was irkfome to her, and fo fhe 
went to her parents. lie fent for her home after 
fome time. As for wronging his bed, I never heard 
the leaft fufpicion of that; nor had he of that any 
jealoufie." It has efcaped the biographers of the 

c MS. as before. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 51 

poet, however, that, while he ingenuoufly admits 
" p that every motion of a jealous mind mould not 
be regarded," he has not failed to enumerate, among 
the realbns which are laid to have warranted divorce 
in elder times, " the wilfull haunting of feafts, and 
invitations with men not of her near kindred, the 
lying forth of her houfe without probable caufe, the 

frequenting of theatres againft her hufband' s mind, 
&c." If this be not pointed directly at the conduct 
of his wife, the following paifage certainly exhibits 
his indignation at her continuance under her father '«? 
roof, while at the fame time it confirms Aubrey's 
account that he did not fufpecl her as faithlefs to his 
bed. " q He [Grotius] mews alio, that fornication is 
taken in Scripture for fuch a continual headftrong 
behaviour, as tends to plain contempt of the hufband, 
and proves it out of Judges xix. 2, where the Levite's 
wife is faid to have played the whore againft him ; 
which Jofephus and the Septuagint, with the Chal- 
dean, interpret only of ftubbornnefs and rebellion 
againft her hufband: and to this I add that Kimchi, 
and the two other rabbies who glofs the text, are in 

. the fame opinion. Ben Geribm reafons, that had it 
been whoredom, a Jew and a Levite would have dif- 
dained to fetch her again. And this I jliall con- 
tribute, that had it been whoredom, jlie would have 
chofen any other place to run to than to her father's 
house, it being fo infamous for a Hebrew woman to 
play the harlot, and fo opprobrious to the parents. 
Fornication then in this place of the Judges is under- 

* Do&. and Difcip. of Divorce, B. ii. Ch. xviii. 

* Ibid, 



52 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

ftood for Jiubborn difobedience againjl the hufband, 
and not for adultery? 

He fent for her, however, in vain. As all his 
letters, defiring her to return, Mere unanfwered ; fo 
the merTenger, whom he afterwards employed for the 
fame purpole, was difmiffed from her father's houfe 
with contempt. He refolved therefore, without fur- 
ther ceremony, to repudiate her ; and, in defence of 
his refolution, he publifhed four treatifes, the two firft 
in 1644, the two lait in 1645. The Doctrine and 
Difcipline of Divorce ; The Judgement of Martin 
Bucer concerning Divorce ; Tetrachordon, or Expo- 
fitions upon the four chief Places of Scripture which 
treat of Marriage, or Nullities in Marriage ; and 
Co Lifter ion. The laft is a reply to the anonymous 
author of " An Anfwer to a Book, intituled The 
Doctrine and Difcipline of Divorce, or a Plea for 
Ladies and Gentlewomen, and all other Married 
Women againft Divorce. Wherein both Sexes are 
vindicated from all bondage of Canon Law, and 
other miftakes whatibever; and the un found prin- 
ciples of the Author are examined and fully confuted 
by Authority of Holy Scripture, the Laws of this 
Land, and found Rcafon. Loud. 1644/' This 
pamphlet was licenfed and recommended by Mr. 
Jofeph Caryl, a Preibyterian divine, and author of a 
voluminous commentary on the book of Job; whom 
Milton, in his reply, roughly ftigmatizes with repeated 
charges of ignorance, as he alfo ftyles his aniagoniit 
" a ferving-man both by nature and by function, an 
idiot by breeding, and a folieitor by prefumption !" 
The application of thefe and fimilar terms, in the 
difpute, may remind us of the elegant dialogue be- 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 53 

tween Nym and Piftol in Shakfpeare's r King Henry 
the fifth : but there a wife retained, and not a wife 
repudiated, is the caufe of fo much eloquence ! 

There had been another tract written againfl 
Milton's doctrine, which he briefly notices at the 
beginning of his Colafterion, entitled " Divorce at 
pleafure." Nor was he inattentive to the remark of 
Dr. Featley, who in the Epiftle Dedicatory to his 
" Dippers dipt/' publiihed in 1645, enumerates, 
among " the audacious attempts upon Church and 
State, a Tractate of Divorce, in which the bonds of 
marriage are let loofe to inordinate luft, and putting 
away wives for many other caufes befides that which 
our Saviour only approveth, namely, in cafe of 
adultery." Milton fpeaks contemptuoufly of the 
author as having written an " equivocating treatife," 
and as " diving the while himfelf with a more deep 
prelatical malignance againft the prefent State and 
Church-government." Dr. Johnfon and Mr. Warton 
are mifiaken in fuppofing the new doctrine to have 
been unnoticed, or neglected : indeed the two Son- 
nets, which Milton wrote on the fame fubject, feem 
to difcountenance the opinion. It certainly was re* 
ceived with ridicule, as we learn from Howel's s Letter 
to Sir Edward Spencer. But it gave rife to a band, 
not perhaps very formidable, who were called Di- 
vorcers, and even Miltonifts. Pagitt, in his " De- 
fcription of the Hereticks and Sectaries" of that 
period, notices the * former feci; with him, who wrote 

r Ad ii. Scene i. 

s Letters, 10th edit. p. 455. 

1 Herefiography, &c. 1654. p. 12.9. See alfo Ibid. p. 77 
And " A brief defcription &c. of Phanatiques in generaU, 
l660." p. 33. 



54 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

the Tractate of Divorce, at their head. The latter 
title occurs in " u The Epilogue, lhewing the Pa- 
rallell in two Poems, the Return, and the Reftaura- 
tion, Addreffed to her Highncffe the Lady Elizabeth, 
by C[hriitophei\] W[affe]. 1649." 8vo. 

iC Force can but in a Rape engage, 
u 'Tis choice muft make it Marriage : 
" Hence a conveyance they contrive, 
(< Which muft on us their caufe derive : 
" This muft attaque, what holds out (till, 
" And is impregnable, the Wilk 
iC This muft enchant our confcious hands, 
" To {lumber in like guilty bands, 

u This book was obligingly pointed out to me by Thomas 
Park, Efq; to whom the literary world is indebted for fome of 
the fweeteft Sonnets in the Englifh language. The fame gentle- 
man directs me to the following bitter application of Milton's 
doctrine to himfelf by G. S. (whom I fuppofe to be the fame 
pprfoh as the author of the weak performance noticed in Mr. 
Warton's and my own remarks on the poet's Sonnet to Cyriack 
Skinner,) in " Britain's Triumph, for her imparaUel'd deliver- 
ance and her joyful celebrating the Proclamation of her moft 
gracious incomparable king Charles the fecond &c. 1660." 4to. 
G. S. the author, after fatirizing the members of the Rump 
Parliament, thus proceeds, p. 15. 

" Bat who appears here with the curtain drawn ? 

" What, Milton ! are you come to fee the fight? 

" Oh Image-breaker ! poor knave ! had he fawn 

" That which the fame of made him crye out-right, 
u I lead taken counfel of Achitophell, 
" Swung himfelf weary, and fo gone to hell. 

" This is a fure Divorce, and the beft way; 
11 Seek, Sir, no further, now the trick is found, 
«< To part a fallen knave from's wife, that day 
" He doth repent his choyce ; ftab'd, hang'd, or drown'd, 
" Will make all fure and further good will bring, 
u The wretch will rail no more againft his King." 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 55 

u While,, like the froward Miltonifi, 
" We our old nuptiall knot untwift : 
" And with the hands, late faith did joyn, 
" The bill of plain Divorce now figne." 

It had been treated alio as an " w errour fo grofs 
as to need no other confutation," than the mere men- 
tion of it. But before thefe remarks had been made 
upon a doctrine, at which the ihafts of ridicule as 
well as cenliire might indeed be fairly levelled, the 
innovation of the author had alio been oppofed from 
the pulpit. The preibyterian clergy had not only 
caufed him to be fummoned before the Houfe of 
Lords, by whom however he was quickly difmhTed ; 
but one of them, in a fermon before the Lords and 
Commons on a faft-day, had endeavoured in vain to 
excite their indignation agamft him. Milton notices 
this attack in the beginning of his Tetrachordon, and 
thanks the auditors for not repenting of what the 
preacher called their fin, the neglecting to brand his 
book with fome mark of their difpleafure. This op- 
ponent, who has been hitherto unnoticed, was Herbert 
Palmer, B. D. a Member of the Alfembly of Divines, 
and parliamentary Mafter of Queen's College, Cam- 
bridge. " x If any," fays he to his judicial audience, 

w In " A Giaffe for the Times, &c. With a briefe Collection 
of the Errors of our Times, and their Authors Names. Col- 
lected by T. C. a friend to Truth. Lond. 1648." 4to. Milton 
and his doclrine are noticed in p. 6. T. Forde, the dramatick 
writer, appears to have entertained no favourable opinion of 
incompatibility of temper being urged as a reafon for divorce. 
See his letter to T. C. apparently written at the time when 
Milton's treatife was firft publifhed, in the collection of his 
Letters, 8vo. Lond. 166*0, p. 103 — 106. 

x I had examined many fingle fermons of this period, under 



56 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

" plead confcienee for the lawfulnefle of polygamy ; 
(or for divorce for y other cauies than Chrift and his 
Apoitles mention ; of which a wicked booke is abroad 
and uncenfured, though deferring to be burnt, whqfe 
author hath been fo impudent as to Jet his name to it, 
and dedicate it to your/elves,) or for liberty to marry 

the hope of difcovering the author who had thus publickly 
attacked Milton ; but without fuccefs. I am indebted to my 
liberal friend, James Bindley, Efq; for pointing out, after a long 
refearch alfo, this forgotten difcourfe ; of which I will give the 
title : " The Glafle of God's Providence towards his Faith full 
Ones. Held forth in a Sermon preached to the two Houfes of 
Parliament at Margaret's Weftminfter, Aug. 13, 1644. being an 
extraordinary day of Humiliation. Wherein is difcovered the 
great failings that the belt are liable unto, &c. The whole is 
applyed fpecially to a more carefull obfervation of our late 
Covenant, and particularly againft the ungodly toleration 
pleaded for under -pretence of Liberty of Confcience, By Herbert 
Palmer, B. D. &c." 

y And yet it feems, in the ConfeJJio Fidei of the Aflembly of 
Divines publifhed in 1656, that Milton's do&rine had not been 
entirely neglected. See Cap. xxiv. " De Conjugio et Divortio. 
§. 6. Quamvis ea fit hominis corruptio, ut proclivis (it ad ex- 
cogitandum argumenta indebite illos, quos Deus connubio 
junxit, diflbciandi ; nihilominus tamen extra adulterium ac 
defertioncm ita ohjiinatam ut cui nullo remedio nee ab ecciefia nee a 
magiftratu civUi fubveniri pojjit, fufficiens caufa nulla eiTc poteft 
conjugium difiblvendi." Conf. Fid. 12mo. Cantab. l()5(), p. 6*5. 
I am indebted to Mr. Octavius Gilchrift, the ingenious editor 
of bifhop Corbet's poetry, for the notice of the following ftroke 
of fat ire, evidently pointed at Milton, both in refpect. to this 
and to another fubjeer, fo late as in l(>70, in the Preface to 
Ecbard's Grounds and Occafions of the Contempt of the Clergy 
and Religion; " I am not, I'll allure you, any of thofe occa- 
fional writers, that, milling preferment at the Univerfity, can 
prefently write you their new ways of education ; or, being 
•tormented with an ill-chofen wife, let forth the Doctrine of 
Divoiccto be truly evangelical." 



AND WRITLNGS OF MILTON. 57 

inceftuoufly, will you grant a toleration for all this f 
Milton now became an enemy to the Preibyterians, 
whom he before had favoured. Notwithstanding 
their oppofition, however, he proceeded to illuftrate 
his opinion more forcibly by paying his addreffes to 
a young lady of great wit and beauty, the daughter 
of one Dr. Davis, with a defign to marry her ! But 
this defire of carrying his doctrine into practice was 
not countenanced by the lady. What is more re- 
markable, the proceeding contributed to effect a re- 
conciliation with the difcarded wife. 

In the mean time, Milton purfued his ftudies with 
unabating vigour; and, in 1644, at the requeit of his 
friend, Mr. Samuel z Hartlib, publiihed his tractate 
Of Education ; or plan of academical inftitution : in 
which, as he expreffes it, he leads his fcholar from 
Lilly to his commencing matter of arts. Mr. Wartou 
obferves that a Milton's plan has more of mow than 
value. " b Education in England," Dr. Johnfon has 
remarked, " has been in danger of being hurt by two 
of its greateft men, Milton and Locke. Milton's 
plan is impracticable, and I fuppofe has never been 
tried. Locke's, I fancy, has been tried often enough, 
but is very imperfect ; it gives too much to one fide, 
and too little to the other ; it gives too little to lite- 
rature." It is perhaps not generally known that 
Milton's treatife on this fubject has been tranilated 

z Of this remarkable perfon the reader may find an account, 
written by himfelf, in Rennet's Regifter, 1728. p. 868. See alfo 
Mr. Walton's firft edition of Milton's Smaller Poems, p. 116, &c, 
A Life of Hartlib is a defideratum in Englifh biography. 

a See his firft edition of Milton's Smaller Poems, p. 117- ' 
b Bofwell's Life of Johnfon, ed. 1799. vol. iii. p. 382. 



58 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

into French. The tranflator has beftowed much 
eulogium c upon the author. In the fame year, 
Milton publiihed his Areopagitica, a Speech for the 
liberty of urdicenfed Printing : perhaps the belt 
vindication, as Dr. Newton obferves, that has been 
publifhed at any time, or in any language, of that 
liberty which is the bafis and fupport of all other 
liberties, the liberty of the prefs. But the candid 
critick adds, that it produced not the defired effect ; 
for the Prefbyterians were as fond of exercifing the 
licenfing power, when they got it into their own 
hands, as they had been clamorous before in in- 
veighing againft it, while it was in the hands of the 
Prelates. 

e " Dans les terns que nous nous propofions de donner ces 
Lettres au Public, il nous en eft tombe entre les mains une de 
Milton, qui n' a pas encore paru daus notre langue, &c. — Rien ne 
fait tant d' honneur a Y Angleterre que de voir que le plus grand 
po'ete, et l' un de plus celebrcs philofophes [Locke], qu' elle ait 
eus, ont afiez fenti de quelle importance etoit Y education des 
c.nfans, pour s' en occuper ferieufement. — Dans cette Lettre il eft 
aife de s' appercevoir que c' a ete un des plus fcavans hommes qui 
ayent vecu. C'cft par cette vafte erudition, joint a un heureux 
genie, qu' il eft devenu le plus grand de tous les poetes modernes. 
Aufti fon Paradis Perdu n' eft-il pas 1' ouvrage de fa jeuncfie : 
Peut-etre alors en avoit-il concu Y idee ; mais avant que de 1* 
executer, il avoit vecu avec les hommes, il avoit connu 1' ufage 
et la puiftance des paflions, il avoit 1' efprit orne de la connoiffance 
de toutes les fciences & de tous les arts. Sans examiner fi la 
maniere d' elcver la jeunefie que Milton propofeeft aifee a reduire 
en pratique; il eft fur que fon plan eft rempli de vuiis tn N s-fmes Sc 
tr^s-fages, & qu' il paroit contenir tout ce qui eft necefiaire pour 
former un citoycn utile a fa patrie & agreablc a la fociete." 
Lettres fur [/Education des Princes. Avec une Lettre de MiN 
ton, &c. 1746. Preface, pp. lxxv, lxxix. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 59 

His father having come to live with him, after the 
furrender of Reading to the Earl of Effex in 1643, 
and his fcholars now encreafing, he required a larger 
houfe ; before his removal to which, he was furprifed, 
at one of his ufual vifits to a relation in the lane of 
St. Martin's-le-grand, to fee his wife come from 
another room, and beg forgivenefs on her knees. 
The interview on her part had been concerted. The 
declining ftate of the royal caufe, and confequently 
of her father's family, as well as the intelligence of 
Milton's determination to marry again, caufed her 
friends to employ every method to re-unite the in- 
fulted huiband and difobedient wife. It was con- 
trived that flie ihould be ready, when he came, in 
another apartment. Fenton, in his elegant {ketch of 
the poet's life, judicioufly remarks, that " d it is not 
to be doubted but an interview of that nature, fo 
little expected, muft wonderfully affect him : and 
perhaps the impreffions it made on his imagination 
contributed much to the painting of that pathetick 
fcene in Paradife Lqft y in which Eve addrefles herfelf 
to Adam for pardon and peace. At the intercemon 
of his friends who were prefent, after a fhort reluc- 
tance, he generoufly facrificed all his refentment to 
her tears : 



< Soon his heart relented 

' Towards her, his life fo late, and fole delight, 
' Now at his feet fubmiffive in diftrefs/ 

And after this re-union fo far was he from retaining 
an unkind memory of the provocations which he had 

d Prefixed to his edition of Paradife Loft, firfl publiihed in 
1725. 



60 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

received from her ill conduct, that, when the king's 
caufe was entirely oppreiTed, and her father who had 
been active in his loyalty was expofed to fequeftra- 
tion, Milton received both him and his family to pro- 
tection and free entertainment, in his own houfe, till 
their affairs were accommodated by his intereft in the 
victorious faction." Mr. Powell, however, feems to 
have fmarted feverely for his attachment to the royal 
party. I obferve, in the " Catalogue of the Lords, 
Knights, and Gentlemen, that have compounded for 
their Eftates," printed at London in 1655, that he 
was thus branded as well as fined : " Richard Powel, 
Delinquent, per John Pye, Efq; 5761. 12s. 3d." And 
his houfe had been before feized by the rebels. 

At the time of Milton's reconciliation with his wife, 
it was fettled that fhe mould refide in the houfe of a 
friend, till his new manfion, which he had procured 
in e Barbican, was ready for the reception of his en- 
creafed houfhold. When it is confidered that Milton 
cheerfully opened his doors to thofe who had treated 
him with indignity and breach of faith ; to a father, 
who, according to the poet's f Nuncupative Will, 
never paid him the promifed marriage portion of a 
thoufand pounds, and to a mother, who, according 
to Wood, had encouraged the daughter in her per- 
verfenefs ; we cannot but accede to Mr. Hayley's 
conclufion, that the records of private life exhibit 
DOl a more magnanimous example of forgivenefs and 
beneficence. They are fuppofed to have left him 

■ Sec thf Note; on Lawes's Dedication of Comus. 

f Subjoined t<> tins account of the Life In the Notes on 
the Will Mr. Warton relates fe.venil particulars concerning 
Mr. Powell. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 61 

foon after the death of his father, who ended a long 
life in 1647; and whofe declining days had been 
foothed by every attention of a truly affectionate fon. 

While Milton experienced the mortification of 
conjugal defertion, and was immerfed in elaborate 
difcuffions connected with his misfortune, he was not 
without mental amufement. His leifure hours often 
paffed fmoothly away in vifits to a lady of the molt 
engaging talents and converfation, the daughter of 
the Earl of Marlborough ; to whom, as to her huf- 
band Captain Hobfon, a very accompliihed gentle- 
man, his company was peculiarly acceptable. His 
tenth Sonnet, infer ibed to this difcerning lady, is a 
grateful acknowledgement of his efteem. His time 
alfo had been employed in collecting together his 
early poems, both Englifh and Latin, for the prefs. 
They were firft publifhed by Humphrey Mofeley, the 
general publiiher of the poets of his day, in 1645 ; 
who tells us, in his Addrefs to the Reader, that " the 
author's more peculiar excellency in thefe ftudies was 
too well known to conceal his papers, or to keep me 
from attempting to follicit them from him. Let the 
event guide itfelf which way it will, I fhall deferve of 
the age, by bringing into the light as true a birth as 
the Mules have brought forth fince our famous Spencer 
wrote ; whofe poems in thefe Engliih ones are as 
rarely imitated, as fweetly excelled." Mofeley was not 
more difcerning than Milton was modeft. Rut mo- 
defty was a principal feature in Milton's character. 
He affixed only his initials to Lycidas : he acknow- 
ledged, with hefitation, Comus. It is rather iur- 
prifmg, that Mr. Warton fhould have s ailerted that, 

s In the Prefaces to both his Editions of the Smaller Poems. 



62 SOxME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

for feventy years after their firft publication, he re- 
collects no mention of thefe poems in the whole fuc-* 
ceffion of Englifh literature ; and that the quantity 
of an hemiftich, quoted from them, is not to be found 
in the Collections of thofe who have digefted the 
Beauties or Phrafes of the Engliih Poets from 1655 
to 1738 inclufively. It is my duty pofitively to affert 
that in the edition of Poole's Englifh Pamaffus, or 
Help to Englifh Poefie, publiihed in 1677, there are 
few h pages in which quotations may not be found 
from Milton's poetry. In the preface alfo to Ayres's 
Lyrick Poems, publiihed in 1687, Milton is thus 
noticed : 

" If any one quarrel at the oeconomy or ftru&ure of thefe 
poems, many of them being Sonnets, Canzons, Madrigals, 
&c. objecting that none of our great men, either Mr. Waller, 
Mr. Cowley, or Mr. Dryden, whom it was moil proper to 
have followed, have ever ftooped to any thing of this fort ; I 
fhall very readily acknowledge, that, being fenfible of my own 
weaknefs and inability of ever attaining to the performance 
of one thing equal to the worft piece of theirs, it eafily dif* 
fwaded me from that attempt, and put me on this ; which is 
not without prelident : For many eminent perfons have pub- 
limed feveral things of this nature, and in this method, both 
Tranflations and Poems of their own ; as the famous Mr. 
Spencer, Sir Philip Sidney, Sir Richard Fanihaw, Mr, 
Milton, and fome few others : The fuccefs of all which, in 
thefe things, I muft needs fay, cannot much be boafted off 
and though I have little reafon, after it, to expe6l credit from 
thefe my flight Mifcellanies, yet has it not difcouraged me 
from adventuring on what my genius prompted me to." 

h And, to the credit of Poole's fele&ion, I may add that the 
examples are very often taken from Lycidas, L' 'Allegro and II 
Pen/crqfOf and the Ode on the IS utility. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 63 

I may further obferve that L 'Allegro and II Pen- 
ferofo appear to have fometimes caught the notice of 
Robert Herrick, in his Hefperides, publiihed in 1648; 
and that both the eale and imagery of theie poems 
are certainly copied, in a few initances, by Andrew 
Marvell, the intimate friend of Milton. I will cite a 
proof from his verfes, entitled The Garden, Poems, 
ed. 1681, p. 49. 

" Fair Quiet, have I found thee here, 
" And Innocence, thy lifter dear ! 
<c Miftaken long, I fought you then 
" In bulie companies of men." 

That we meet with no notices of theie exquifite 
poems in the days of Cromwell, muft be imputed to 
" the dark and fallen humour of the time." And 
we may truly apply, to fuch neglect, the judicious 
couplet of Milton's * happieft imitator : 

<e Verfe, in the fineft mould of fancy caft, 
tc Was lumber in an age fo void of tafte." 

In 1647 Milton removed to a fmaller houfe in 
Holborn, which opened backward into Lincoln's-Inn 
fields; and continued to inftrucl; a few fcholars. 
Phillips tells us, that " he is much miftaken, if there 
was not about this time a delign of making him an 
adjutant-general in Sir William Waller's army. But 
the new modelling of the army proved an obftruclion 
to the defign." This perhaps may be doubted, when 
it is confidered that Waller was efteemed a leader of 
the Preibyterians againft the deiigns of the Indepen- 
dents. Milton, in his military capacity, could not 
have ferved cordially under a general fo difpofed. 

1 Cowper. Table-Talk, 



64 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Till the overthrow of the kingly government in 
the death of Charles, his pen appears to have been 
unemployed. It was refumed in order to filence the 
outcry, raifed by the Prefbyterians, againft the deed 
of blood ; and to advance the intereits of the infant 
commonwealth. The product of it was entitled, 
" The Tenure of Kings and Magiftrates, proving 
that it is lawfull, and hath been held fo through all 
ages, for any, who have the power, to call to account 
a tyrant, or wicked king ; and, after due conviction, 
to depofe, and put him to death, if the ordinary 
magiftrate have neglected or denied to do it : And 
that they, who of late fo much blame depofmg, are 
the men that did it themfelves, 1649." Milton 
feems to have been not correct in his charge. He 
fhould have added the Papifts and Independents, 
who were banded in firm league againft the Church 
and the King. He remembered however the affift- 
ance which had been afforded by the Pope, when 
he wrote his treatife Of True Religion four and 
twenty years afterwards ; of whom he fays, " we 
have fhaken off his Babyloniih yoke, [who] hath not 
ceafed by his fpies and agents, bulls and emifTaries, 
once to deftroy both King and Parliament" On 
this part of Englilh hiftory it cannot be uninterefting 
to enlarge. 

" I fhall here fay no more," fays the editor of a very cu- 
rious k tra6t, w than that the doctrine which was practis'd in 

k " Certain paflkges which happened at Newport in the Ifle of 
Wight, Nov. 29, 1648, relating to King Charles I. Written by 
Mr. Bdward Cooke, of Highnam in Gloucefterfhire, fo me time 
Colonel of u Regiment under Oliver Cromwell. Loud. 1(>£)0,'* 

•1 ' . 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 65 

forty eight, was pubMied in Englifh in twenty one, in the 
book entitled The Rights of the Prelate and the Prince, as 
good Roman Catholick divinity, by J. E. with Licence of 
Superiors ; and confequently, that John Goodwin and John 
Milton were not the firft broachers of it in England. The 
ftrain of the whole book is of that nature, and the following 
words are part of it, ch. 15. p. 375. And if Kings, who 
were not excommunicated nor deprived by the Pope, may 
by the Commonwealth be depos'd and kill'd, where they are 
intolerable tyrants ; why may not the Commonwealth exercife 
the fame power over tyrants excommunicated and deprived 
by the Pope, they, after excommunication and deprivation, 
being no more Kings, but private men." 

The fubjecl; indeed had been before difcuffed in 
a very interelting difcourfe, of which the title is, 
" Herod and Pilate reconciled: Or, The Con- 
cord of Papift and Puritan (againft Scripture, 
Fathers^ Councels, and other Orthodox all Writers) 
for the Coercion, Depofition, and Killing of Kings. 
Difcovered by David Owen, Batchelour of Divi- 
nitie, &c. Cambridge, 16 10," 4 to . To this point 
I may alio apply an extract from " Foxes and 
Firebrands ; or a Specimen of the danger and har- 
mony of Popery and Separation ;" attributed by 
fome to Dr. Nelfon, by others to Sir James Ware : 
" But that which makes the thing plain, is the 
difcovery which was made to Sir William Bofwell by 
Andreas ab Habnerfeld ; which was communicated 
firft by Sir William to my Lord of Canterbury, and 
by him transmitted to the King then at York, 
Novemb. 1640. The whole is printed by itfelf, and 
in l Rufh worth's Collections; and is too long here 
to infert ; but the principal parts and matter of the 

? Hift. Colled, p. 1314. 
VOL, I, F 



(yd SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

plot was this ; That there was a defign on foot, by 
the Pap ills, againit the King and the Archbiihop. 
That, to effect this, the Scottifh commotions were 
raifed, and fomented by the Jefuits ; that they exaf- 
perated the Englifh Diffenters by the feverity ufed 
againft Pryn, Burton, and Baftwick ; and the Scots, 
by the fears of Popery upon the impofition of the 
Common-Prayer book ; that Cuneus or Con, the 
Pope's Legate, and Chamberlain a Scot Chaplain 
and Almoner to Cardinal Richlieu, were the great 
negociators of this confpiracy; and that the defign 
was to embroil thefe nations in a civil war. The 
troubles came on fo faft, as may well be fuppofed, pre- 
cipitated for fear of a further profecution of this difco- 
very, that the Archbiihop loft his head for refufing a 
cardinal's hat, and oppofing the Scottish Covenanters ; 
and the King his, becaufe he would not give away the 
crown, and put down the mitre, by granting tole- 
ration, 2d. edit. 1682, pp. 50, 51." It was one of 
the threats of the Covenanters, that " the Enemy 
mould be forced either to give Liberty of Confcience 
to the Catholicks, or put themfelves in danger of 
lofing all, p. 48." Other proofs of the m combina- 
tion might be added. The following narrative is too 
curious, and too well authenticated, to be here 
omitted. It is from the pen of Dr. Bargrave, 
(whofe manufcript I have already noticed) who 
was particularly acquainted with Ilolftenius, one of 
Milton's friends. Being at Rome, he fays, 

u Cardinel RoiTetti was fliewed to me to take more pelli- 
cular notice of him, becaufe that he had binn almoft 3 yeares 

m See more particularly Rennet's Regifter, 1728, pp. 539, 540, 
And Lord StrafibrUc's Letters, 1739) vol. ii. p. 74. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 67 

in England the Popes Nuntio Incognito, as yon may find in 
the Italian Hiftorian mentioned in the margent °. 

" An . 1639 There arriued (fayth he) at London, to 
refide at the Court as a gentleman traueler, fent by Car- 
dinal Barberino, but effectually he was the Pope's Nuntio, 
by name Charles Roffetti, an Earle by birth ; whoe had 
taken vpon him the Church habite of a Prelate; whoe 
was of a greate fpirit, a&iue, and prudent ; able to vndertake 
bufinefs of the greateit difficultie. He was valerous of heart, 
had a learned tongue, was quick in parts, in breif he was 
fuch an one, that his fellow could not be fownde in all the 
Court of Rome. His letters were dated at Rome the 16 th . 
of Aprill : (and then my Author telleth us a fecret that we are 
not to know, viz.) And becaufe that in England he woare a 
Secular habit, and tooke vpon him no other name but of 
Conte Roffetti, therefore I will allfo hide, where I haue oc- 
calion to mention him, his ecclefiafticall title of Monfignore, 
and giue him onely the title of his noble famely p . Vpon his 
t:omming to Court, and being courteoufly receiued, all things 
went well with the Ro : Catholicks ; and thofe Preiits, that 
by law were to be punifhed with Death, were onely banifhed. 
This was the Spring time of the Catholick Religion in that 
kingdome, which florifhed by the fweete favourable blajls of 
the Conte Roffetti / Vpon this libels went about that q the 
King and Archbifhop were Popifli &c ; wherevpon the Arch- 
bifhop aduifed the King to rid his Court of the Roman Mi- 
nisters, and to renew the rigour of the law. The Conte 
Roffetti, hearing of this, wold not hide the Intereffe for 
which he was at London ; but, vpon this occafion, being 
made more vigoroufe of courrage in this time of dainger, 
thought that now an opportunely was giuen him to captiuate 
the Kings foul, and to conduct him to the Catholick Fayth ! 
vpon which he broke his minde to a confident Courtier of 
theires, whoe yet doubted how to effect it. Roffetti, having 

II Conte Bifaccione Delle Guerre CiviliD'Inghil terra, Edit, 
2*. 1653. p. 17, 

? P. 18. q F. 22; 

r 2 



63 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

bin perfuaded by the Queene to write to the Pope for abowt 
an 10O000 lb fterling to fupplie the Kings neceffeties, His 
Holinefs his anfwer was, r That the Pope was very ready to 
fupply the King fo foone as euer he mould declare him felfe a 
Cathoiick, the onely auaylable meanes to lofen the chaines of 
the Treafurie of the Caitle of St. Angelo at Rome. But, for 
a King that mould turne to the bofom of the Church, he 
would lay hands upon that Sacred Treaforie, otherwife fhut 
vp and impenetrable &c. — Where one may reade a greate 
many Intreegues abowt the lending of this mony, s and how 
refolutely the King withftood theire attempts, and how Rof- 
fetti aifalted the two Archbimops to returne to the Roman 
Fayth r . And then we haue mention of RovTetti's letter to 
the King to perfvvade him to turn Papift. But he finding 
his Ma : tlc vnmooveable and firme as a Rock, that ftrongly 
refifteth the fury of ftormes and tempefts, hauing his Faith 
fixed and faltned to a more fure foundation ; this Latent 
u Nuntio gaue ouer his fruitlefs Defigne. Finding (faith my 
Author) that he gaue light viito the blinde, that he [pake to 
one that was deaft, and, as the prouerb hath it, wold with 
water n'afli a blaekmore white, the (Latent) Nuntio forfooke 
him ; and ftole owt of England (for feare of the Parliament 
that fented him) by the help of Sig r . Giuftiniano the Venetian 
Imbaffador, and at his comeing to Rome fa decorato delta 
Porpora Vaticana. 

" Though he was forced to be gonn, yet the effects of his 
Nuntiature lafted all the Ciuill VVarr, efpecially amongft the 
Iriih Rebells w . To difprooue the calomny that was rayfed 
upon the King (probably both by Papift and Preibyterians) 
he vfed all the meanes he could to fliew that he was a cordiall 
Proteftant, as is feene by his mony then coyned. So in the 
feuerall Speeches that he made at the head of his Army, one 
of them, fayth my Author, hath this pa(Tage x : ' If I tooke a 
wife of an other Religion being of the Roman faith, it was 

'P. 31. 3 P. 32, 33. l P. 34. u P. 35, 

w P. 44. * P. 80, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 69 

with a Univerfall Confent: If the Lord Roffetti came to my 
Court, I ufed him eourteoufly, as a noble man and a ftrainger, 
as it is fitt for Princes to doe, and yet vpon onely fufpition, 
and not guilt of any wrong to England, 1 fent him away.' — 
My Author in another place y , fpeaking of the death of 
Archbifhop Laud on the Scaffold, by way of fcoffe fayth — 
It had bin better for him to haue turned Catholick, and to 
haue gonn to Rome, as he* had binn aduifed, by the 'prudent 
counfell of the Popes zealous Nuntio, Rofetti, now a Car- 
dinall z / And, fpeaking of our Kings death, he hath this 
paffage — His death was foretould (Jo long ago as when he 
was Prince of Wales) when he zvas in Spaine, where he, 
going to vijit a holy Nunne, whoe was much efteemed for her 
fanttity ; Jhee foretold him, that, if he did not hearken to 
the infpirations of that light which his gardian AngellJJiold 
injiruci him in, hejhold dye a miferable death, and mine all 
his progeny ! This An g ell was Cardinal Rossetti, whoe 
by his frequent infpirations, not internally but to the eare and 
the eye, by the voice and by writings, by his eloquent and 
angelicall fuggeltions, indeavoured his conuerfion to the Ca- 
tholik Faith ; Card : Roffetti an Angel in practice ! Greate 
Minifter of the Pope, and an Angel by his office, as being 
a Nuntio or Alejjenger ; a zealous Nuntio ! Whence it is no 
maruell, if what the holy Nunne foretold had its effect ! • 

" Card : Barberino at Rome ; This Man his Agent here ; 
Card: Mazarino in France; And Gio : Rinuccini Arch- 
bifliop of Firmo in Italy, and the Popes Nuntio in Ireland ; 
were the Popifli Ecclefiafticks, that by the helpe of the Je- 
fuites, in all probabilety, were the men that ruined the King 
and Kingdome vnder the new name and Cheate of indepen- 
dent ; I being tould beyond Sea by Muncks and Fryars 
that I might heare Mafs where I wold among the Indepen- 
dents; that Word iignefying onely Independent as to the 
Church of England, but Dependent as to the Church of 
Rome ; and fo our warr was a warr of Religion to bring in 

y P. 124. 2 p. 177. 



70 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Popery, and the King was a true martyr (that died for his 
Religion) in reuenge for the death of the Queene of Scotts, 
his grandmother." 

This acute traveller relates alfo that he was at 
Rome, on his fourth vifit to that city, when Charles 
the fecond was reitored ; which event, he fays, " to 
my knowledge, was to the great griefe of the Triple 
Crowne and College of Cardinals, who thought to 
have binn Mafters of England." In another page 
he cites the Italian author, already mentioned, to 
{how that " Charles the firft fufpected Mazzarino 
and the Imbaflador of France to have had a hand in 
his troubles." 

From theie communications, which the fubjec~fc of 
Milton s book induced me to make, I pafs on to 
notice his next publication in 1649; which was 
" Obfervations on the Articles of Peace between 
James Earl of Ormond, for King Charles I. on 
the one hand, and the Irifh Papifts and Rebels 
on the other, &c. And Animadverjions on the Scotch 
Prejbytery at Belfaft." The new order of things 
feemed to be threatened by the defertion of the 
Scotch Prelbyterians to the ftandard of Ormond; 
and he made thefe remarks to obviate the danger. 

He next entered upon his Hiftory of England ; of 
which he had written four books, when, without ex^ 
pectancy or folicitation of preferment, he was invited 
by the Council of State to be Latin Secretary ; as 
they had determined neither to write to others abroad, 
nor to receive any anfweyrs, except in that language, 
which was common to them all. Their choice could 
not have fallen upon a more perfect mafter of La~ 
tinity. Dr. Newton wifties that fucceeding princes 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 71 

had followed this example of Latin correfpondence ; 
becaufe, " a in the opinion of very wife men, the uni- 
verfality of the French language will make way for 
the univerfality of the French monarchy." It may 
be added, that Milton himfelf has countenanced the 
opinion : " Then began the Engliih to lay afide 
their own ancient cuftoms, and in many things to 
imitate French manners; the great peers to fpeak 
French in their houfes, in French to write their bills 
and letters, as a great piece of gentility ; afhamed of 
their own : a prefage of their fubje&ion JJiortly to 
that people , whofe falhions and language they ajfeBed 
fo Jlavijhly V Perhaps in the affectation of her 
fafhions and manners, rather than in the ufage of her 
language, France may have found, and may yet hope 
to find, in other countries, no mean auxiliary to her 
deteftable aim of univerfal domination. But Britain 
has ftood, and may it ftand to the laft period of time, 
u unfhaken, unfeduced," by fuch degrading imita- 
tions in a few faithlefs children. That innocence, 
and modefty, and tendernefs of heart, by which her 
daughters have ever been diflinguifhed ; and that well- 
principled conduct;, the true fpirit of liberty and real 
love of religion, for which her fons have been re- 
nowned; will never, let us hope, fall victims to the 
defigns of a pretended philofophy, which confounds 
the diftinctions of right and wrong; to 

— " thofe new-fangled toys, and trimming flight 
" Which takes our late fantafticks with delight V 

a Life of Milton. 

b Hift. of England, B. vi. edit. 1698, p. 111. 

c From Milton's mafterly Verfes At a Vacation Excrcife in the 

F 4 



72 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

About this time the King's impreffive book, en- 
titled " Eicon Bafilik6, or the Portraiture of his 
Sacred Majefty in his Solitudes and Sufferings," 
having been publifhed ; Milton was ordered to pre- 
pare an anfwer to it. He accordingly printed, by 
authority, in 1649, his " Eiconoclaftes," or the 
image-breaker', the purport of the King's book being, 
in his opinion, A " to catch the worthless approbation 
of an inconftant, irrational, and • image-doting rabble." 
Milton's work has been tranflated into French, It 
has been afferted, but not proved, that Milton to- 
gether with Bradfhaw prevailed upon the printer to. 
interpolate a prayer, taken from Sidney's Arcadia, 
in fome editions of the King's book. Dr. Newton 
candidly obferves, " I cannot but hope and believe, 
that Milton had a foul above being guilty of fo mean 
an action to ferve fo mean a purpofe ; and there is as 
little reafon for fixing it upon him, as he had to tra- 
duce the King for profaning the duty of prayer, f with 

College, addrefied to the corrupters of his Native Language, 
See the Notes on ver. 18 of that poem, 

* Eiconoclaftes, at the end. 

e The popularity of the book was unquestionably very great. 
And no wonder. Interefting as the fubject is, the ftyle is alfo ex- 
tremely elegant as well as forcible. Dr. Symmons in difcufling 
the controverted point whether the king or bifbop Gaudcn was the 
author of it, relates, from the reft of the biographers, that it 
received two anfivers, viz. the fLlxuv ax^aro? in lo'51, and Vindicia? 
Carolinae in l6$2. Several other tracts require to be examined, 
(and which might be named,) on this fubject. In particular, for 
the life of thofe who may hereafter investigate the point, it may be 
necefiary to ftate that the Etxwv ccK^m written againft the king, 
and the Etx<v» r> t^™ for him, (both publifhed in 1649,) defervs 
wore attention than hitherto has been beftoweci on them. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 73 

the polluted train of romances.' For there are not 
many finer prayers in the beft books of devotion ; 
and the King might as lawfully borrow and apply it 
to his own oc canons, as the f Apoftle might make 

f This reasoning (though not noticed by Dr. Newton) 
occurs in the E^v ccxhccros, The Image Unbroken, an Anfwer 
to Milton's book, printed in l6Sl. The pafiage is worthy of 
citation. " He [Milton] fayes, herein the worji of kings pro- 
fejing Chrijlianifme have byfarr exceeded him, and he gives his 
reafon,ybr that the king hath, as it were, unhallowed and unchrijlned 
by borrowing to a Chrijiian ufe prayers offered to a heathen god. 

" And doth faint Paul excede the worft of kings profeffing 
Chriftianifme by borrowing to a Chriftian ufe. the words of an 
heathen philofopher, and poet ? did he thereby unhallow and 
unchriftian Scripture? 

" His [Milton's] meaning is, as followes afterward, that the 
king ufed a prayer taken out of Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia. 
After the firft edition of his Majefly's booke, the printers, 
finding the greate vent of them, in the following editions printed 
prayers, and other things in the king's name, not belonging to 
the booke. Among thefe prayers, there is a prayer taken out 
of the Arcadia. That prayer is neither made by a heathen 
woman, nor to a heathen god, but is compofed by the author a 
Chrifiian, without any reference to any heathen deitie ; and the 
author is not thought to unchriftian prayer by it, the libeller 
himfelfe faying the booke in its kinde is full of worth and wit ; 
but as his outcry hath noe caufe from the matter, fo heere is 
no evidence of the fact, that his Majefty made ufe of that 
prayer, or popt into the bifhopp's hands a relique of his exer- 
cife, though he might warrantably have ufed it, and profeffed 
it." P. 82. 

Peck aim res us that he had feen an Englifh edition of the 
Eicon, printed in 1648, in which this prayer was not to be found. 
Dejid. Cur. ed. fol. vol. ii. lib. xiv. p. 48. I have before me a 
Latin tranflation of the Eicon by Dr. Earle, printed in 1649, 
in which alfo we feek in vain for this famous prayer. Whether 
Milton intended to ridicule the king's book by the following 
remark, I know not; " there wanted onely rinte, and that, they 
fay % is bejioved upon it lately" Eiconoclaftes, ch. vi. 



?4 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

quotations from heathen poems and plays : And it 
became Milton the leaft of all men to bring fuch an 
accufation againft the King, as he was himfelf parti- 
cularly fond of reading romances, and has made ufe 
of them in fome of the beft and lateft of his writings." 
Milton's fuppofed impofture has been alfo difcredited 
by Dr. Birch 5 . 

Having thus diftinguiihed himfelf as the advocate 
of republicanifm, the M embers of the Englim council 
naturally appointed him to vindicate their caufe 
againft the attack of no mean opponent. King 
Charles the fecond, being now protected in Holland, 
had employed Salmafius, a learned Frenchman, pro- 
feflbr of Polite Learning at Leyden, to write a de- 
fence of his late father, and of monarchy. " Salma- 
fius," Dr. Johnfon obferves, " was a man of ikill in 
languages, knowledge of antiquity, and fagacity of 
cmendatory criticifm, almoft exceeding all hope of 
human attainment ; and having, by exceffive praifes, 
been confirmed in great confidence of himfelf, though 
he probably had not much confidered the principles 
of fociety, or the rights of government, undertook the 
employment without diftruft of his own qualifications; 
and, as his expedition in writing was wonderful, in 
1649 publilhed Defenjio Regia." It is certainly re- 
markable that Salmafius, the penfioner to a republick, 
fhould write a vindication of monarchy. The States 
indeed ordered it to be fupprefled. Before he had 
proceeded in his work, he was thus cautioned by his 
friend Sarravius : h " Periculofae plenum opus alea? 

* See the Inquiry into the Orig. of Par. Loft, p. 233. 
h M. Gudii ct C. Sarrayii, Epiftolae. Ultraje&i, 16*97. Sarrav. 
Ep. cxcYiii. p. 203. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 75 

aggrederis, Defenfionem dico nuper occifi Britanni- 
arum Regis; maxime cum veftri Ordines mediam 
viam fecent. Laudo tamen animi tui generofum pro- 
pofitum, quo nefandum fcelus aperte damnare fuftines* 
Hac tamen te cautione uti opus eft, ne ita Majeftatem 
Regiam extollas, ut erga fubditos amorem videantur 
illis gratis largiri." From the correfpondence of this 
learned Frenchman with Salmafius we learn lbme cu- 
rious particulars refpe&ing the work, which occafioned 
Milton's elaborate anfwer. Sarravius advifed him to 
read the king's book, as fubfervient to his purpofe ; a 
book, he fays, which he had read with the higheft ad- 
miration : i " adeo in ea [icone] plena omnia bonitatis 
erga fubditos eximiae, et in Deum pietatis. Ex eo 
hbro potueris non pauca depromere Apologetico tuo 
firmando." After the Defen/io Regia had been pub- 
liihed, he informs him of the blame attached to him 
for not having lent a copy to the widowed queen of 
Charles ; k who, though poor, would yet have paid 
the bearer. Sarravius informs him alio of l reported 
antagonifts, long before Milton appeared againft him, 
Milton indeed commenced hoftile operation imme- 
diately on the publication of Salmalius's defence. 
But the various interruptions, which he mentions in 
the eloquent Preface to his Defeiifio Populi, pre- 
vented his publick difplay of oppofition till the be- 
ginning of the year 16£1 ? 

* Ibid, Ep. ccv. p. 210. 

k Ibid. Ep. ccxxiii. p. 223. " Vidi nobilem Anglum expof- 
tulantem, quod omiferis unum exemplum mittere ad defuncli 
Carolividuam, quae hie [Paris.] degit; Quamvis enim, inquiebat, 
fit in re minime lautd, tamen potuife folvere pretium tabellarii, qui 
Mud attul\ffet.' y 

1 Ibid. Ep. exxxxvii. p. 235, 



76 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Hobbes is faid to have declared himfelf unable 
to m decide whole language was beft, or whofe argu- 
ments were worft. In Dr. Johnfon's opinion, Mil- 
ton's periods were fmoother, neater, and more pointed ; 
but he delights himfelf with teazing his adversary, as 
much as with confuting him. Milton's book was 
burnt at Paris, and at Touloufe. But this procured 
it more readers. From a letter of Nicholas Heinfius 
to Ifaac Voffius it appears to have been tran dated 
into Dutch, and to have been expected alfo in a 
French drefs. Into our own language it was trani- 
lated, at the clofe of the feventeenth century, by Mr. 
Washington of the Temple. Salmafms's book at- 
tracted much lefs notice. It has appeared indeed in 

w " Uterque, fi Hobbio fides, Latino infignis, at rationibus 
vacuus." Comm. de Rebell. Angl.ab an. 1640, &c. a R. Manlio, 
Eq. Aur. 8vo. \6&6. lib. ii. p. 226*. 

It feems that they accufed each other of grammatical blunders. 
I have heard of a copy of Salmafius's book, the margins of 
which are faid to be decorated with barbarifms and folecifms 
detected by Milton. Without weighing the demerits of this 
kind, I will only obferve, that Milton's criticifms appear to 
have occafioned the following farcafm of the witty Butler. Sea 
Butler's Remains, edit. Thyer, vol. i. p. 220. 

fome polemics ufe to draw their fwords 

Againft the language only and the words ; 

As he who fought at barriers with Salmajius, 

Engag'd -with nothing but hisjlyle and phrafes, 

Wavd to ajj'ert the murder of a pri?ice y 

The author of falfe Latin to convince ; 

But laid the merits of the caufe afide, 

By thofe that underftood them to be try'd ; 

And counted breaking Prifcian's head a thing 

More capital than to behead a king; 

For which he has been admir'd by all the learn'd 

Of knaves conccrn'd, and pedants unconcern'd ! 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. ?7 

different forms, both Latin and French ; and, as it 
ihould feem from the correfpondence of Sarravius, 
n in fome editions with flight variations. Salmafius 
afterwards endeavoured to defend his caufe, ac- 
cording to the teftimony of Ifaac Voffius, by a moft 
unjuftifiable attack upon the moral character of 
Milton while he refided in Italy : Both combatants 
indeed had betrayed too much perlbnal malevolence ; 
But it is to the difgrace of Salmaiius that he ihould 
fo far have forgotten himfelf as to confound the 
champion with the affafiin. Milton, for his per- 
formance, was complimented ° at home by the vifits 
or invitations of all the foreign minifters at London, 
as well as by the more folid approbation of his em- 
ployers in the prelent of a thoufand pounds ; and 
by encomiaftick letters from the moft celebrated 
fcholars abroad. Chriftina, queen of Sweden, is 
faid to have treated the defender of monarchy with 
coldnefs, after having read the Defence of the People : 
And Dr. Newton adds that Salmafius was difmiiTed, 
from her Court, with contempt. He was difmiffed, 
or rather retired, not with degradation, but, as Dr. 
Johnfon obferves, with a train of attendance fcarcely 
lefs than regal. Probably for the mean pleafure of 
tormenting Salmafms, this capricious monarch had 
commended Milton. After Salmafius's death, lhe 

n Ibid. Ep. ccxxxvi. p, 234. 

« He perhaps loft the friendship of others on this occafion. 
Certain it feems that the amiable and learned Earl of Bridge- 
water, who had performed the part of the Firft Brother in his 
Comits, now difdained his acquaintance. On the title-page of 
the Defenjio, now in the Marquis of Stafford's pofieflion, that 
Nobleman has written, " Liber igne, Author furcd, digniflimi." 



76 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

allured his widow, by letter, that the had efteemedi 
him as a father, and would never ceafe to honour his 
memory. Salmafius died in 1653 at Spa; having 
prepared a reply to Milton, without books, and by the 
fole help of memory p ; which, left as it was un- 
finished, was q publilhed by his fon, with a dedication 
to the King, at the Reftoration : It is more diftin- 
guifhed for abufe than argument. 

It muft not be omitted that Salmafius, in his De- 
fenfio Regia, had preffed hard upon his adverfary in 
a particular point ; and that Milton, to maintain the 
point, was tempted to put on the fragile armour of 
untruth. A learned prelate, in modern times, has 
detected this diminifhed brightnefs of Milton. 

" r When Salmafius upbraided Cromwell's fa6tion with 
the tenets of the Brownifts, the chofen advocate of that 
execrable faction [Milton] replied, that, if they were 
Brownifts, Luther, Calvin, Bucer, Zuinglius, and all the 
mod celebrated theologians of the Orthodox, muft be in- 
cluded in the fame reproach. A groffer falihood, as far as 
Luther, Calvin, and many others are concerned, never fell 
from the unprincipled pen of a party- writer. However 
fedition might be a part of the puritanick Creed, the general 
faith of the Reformers rejects the infamous alliance." 

Dr. Symmons, who to the late edition of 8 Milton's 
Prole Works has prefixed a life of the author, is 

p Vita et Epift. CI. Salmafii, ab. Ant. Clementio, \656. 
Vit. p. liii. 

*J It appears to have been tranflatcd into Englifh, and pub' 
lifted at London in 1660. See bifhop Rennet's Regifter, p. 270. 
11 Salmafius's Difleltion and Confutation of Milton." 

1 Appendix to Biftiop Watfon's Sermon before the Houfe of 
Lords, Jan. 30, 1793, p. 38. 

* Published in IKOd 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 79 

indignant at this accufation ; conceding indeed to the 
" l liberal and worthy prelate very unfeigned refpecV' 
but at the fame time " protefting againft the rafli- 
nefs which incited him to this violent paragraph ; 
and with fingular humanity deploring the " u unhappy 
infertion" of it, preceded by my " harih imputa- 
tion," into this account of the great poet. No lefs 
defirous than Dr. $ymmons to avoid mifreprefentation 
in fpeaking of Milton, I will copy what he has ad- 
vanced in maintenance of his pity and indignation, 
and with a brief reply leave the charge of rqfhnefs 
to be appropriated as impartiality may direct;. 

(f x To refute this incautious charge/' fays Dr. Symmons, 
" nothing more can be neceffary than the production of the 
paffage in Milton's work, to which the reference is made. 
It concludes the fifth chapter of the Defenfio pro Populo 
Anglicano, and it ftands independently of any thing which 
precedes it. e Quereris enim poftremis hifce feculis difci- 
plinae vigorem laxatum, regulam corruptam/ quod uni fcilicet 
tyranno, cunSZis legibus faluto, difciplinam omnem laxare, 
mores omnium corrumpere, impune non liceat. Hanc doclru 
nam ' Bruniftas inter reformatos* introduxiffe ais : Ita Lu- 
therus, Calvinus, Zuinglius, Bucerus, et Orthodoxorum quot- 
quot celeberrimi theologi fuere, tuo judicio Bruniftce Junt* 
Quo aquiore animo tua maledicla perferunt Angli, cum in 
esclefia doclores prgftantijfimos, totamque adeo ecclefiam 
reformatam, iifdem proph contumeliis debacchari te audiant. 
f You complain/ addreffing himfelf to Salmafius, fays Milton, 
* that in this laft age the vigour of difcipline is impaired and 
its right rule corrupted, becaufe truly it is not in the power 
of one defpot, releafed himfelf from the controll of all law, 
to relax with impunity the general difcipline and to corrupt 
the morals of all. This doctrine, as you fay, was firft intro- 
duced among the reformed by the Brownifts ; fo that, by 
your decifion, Luther, Calvin, Zuinglius, Bucer, and all the 

\ Life, note, p. 321. u Ibid. p. 320. * Ibid. 321. 



80 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

moft celebrated of the orthodox divines are included among 
the Brownifts. The Englifh, therefore, fupport your cal- 
umnies with the greater equanimity, when they hear you thus 
furious in your invectives againft the moft admirable doctors, 
and confequently againft the body itfelf of the reformed 
church.' — If we admit the premifes of Milton, can we refufe 
our aflent to his conclufion ? If to contend for liberty againft 
the tyranny of a fingle perfon be the diftinclion of a Brownift, 
the firft reformers were, beyond all queftion, Brownifts ; for 
one of the principal objects of their liberal and enlightened 
contention was to break the defpotifm of the Court of Rome. 
Milton afltrts nothing but the truth ; and he is juftined in 
bringing it forward by that part of his adverfary's work to 
which he replies. The firft reformers were not only ftrenuous 
in their oppoiition to the papal defpotifm, but were on all 
occafions warm advocates and fupporters of the civil liberties 
of man." 

So then the prelate is refuted by the reprefenta- 
tion, that Milton is fpealdng only of contending for 
liberty againft the tyranny of a iingle perfon ! I cannot 
yield to this a pretence of vindicating Milton; nor may 
I withhold Salmafius's own words. " y Poftremis vero 
faeculis ut in aliis rebus it a et in hac mores, ut jam 
dictum, cum temporibus mutati funt, difciplinae vigor 
laxatus eft, et regula corrupta. Quinimo extitere 
tandem peftes Rerum publicarum, regumque pdriytq, 
et omnis a Deo ordinatas poteftatis hoftes, fophifta 
quidam qui contrariam illi, quae a Chrifto tra- 
dita eft, docirinam introduxerunt de occidendis 
quafi jure regibus Ji difplicerent fabje&is. Tales 
in Pontificiis Jefuitae, inter Reformatos qui vo- 
cantur* Independentes et Bruniftce" Milton's 

r Defenfio Regia, edit. 12 m0 * 1650, p. 166. 
x See this point illuftrated, in the prefent account, p. 6*4, 
& fcq. Salmafius fpeaks correc~tly. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 81 

reply is unqueftionably evafive. It is an effort to 
vindicate his own party " a upon the fame prin- 
ciples," as Dr. Watkins has well obferved, " which 
induced the reformers to feparate from the Church 
of Rome ; an artful manoeuvre to put rebellion againft 
the king, and the reformation from popery, upon the 
fame footincr." 

That the death of Salmafius was haftened by the 
neglect which he is faid to have experienced, on the 
appearance of Milton's book, is by no means clear. 
His biographer, Clementius, gives a diftinct account 
of the diforder which terminated his days, and to 
which he had long been fubject, the gout. The fup- 
pofed credit of deftroying a b literary antagonift may 
indeed be deducted, without injury, from the achieve- 
ments of Milton. 

The firft reply to Milton's Defenfio Populi was 
publifhed in the fame year, and was entitled " Apo- 
logia pro Rege et Populo Anglicano, contra Johannis 
Polypragmatici (alias Miltom Angli) Defenfionem 
deftructivam Regis et Populi." The author was un- 
known. Milton directed his younger nephew to 
anfwer it, who poffibly prepared the firft draught of 
a reply ; which, before it went to prefs, was fo care- 
fully examined and corrected by Milton, that it may 

a Characleriftic Anecdotes of men of learning and genius, &c. 
8vo. 1808, p. 214. 

b Bentley juftly obferves, in the Preface to his Differtation 
on Phalaris, that " he muft be a young writer, and a young 
reader too, that believes Milton and Petavius had themfelves as 
mean thoughts of Salmafius, as they endeavour to make others 
have." Milton could once avow his refpectful opinion of the? 
" indujlry of the learned Salmafius'* Reafon of Ch. Gov. B, u 
Cb.vL 

vol, i„ G 



S3 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

be confidered almoft as his own performance, al* 
though denominated cc Johannis Philippi Angli Re- 
fponfio ad Apologiam anonymi cujufdam tenebrionis 
pro Rege et Populo Anglicano infantiffimam." This 
piece appeared in 1652. Bifhop Bramhall is the 
ideal enemy with whom Phillips here encounters. 
Of fo contemptible and barbarous a compofition as 
the Apologia that learned prelate could not be the 
author. Since the firft edition of this account of 
Milton was publifhed, I have indeed difcovered the 
real author ; and the imputation whether of Milton, 
or his nephew, applied to this excellent bifhop, mult 
never more be named. Dr. Symmons is wholly miftaken 
in his fuppofed difcovery of the author. I have the 
authority alfo of bifhop Bramhall himfelf on my fide c < 

c From the following work we learn the name of the author 
of the Apologia : " Polemica five Stipplementum ad Apologiam 
anonymaro pro Rege et populo Anglicano, adverfus Jo: Miltoni 
Defenfionem populi Anglicani, &c. Per Io: ttowlandum, Pafto- 
rem Anglicum. 1653." i2mo. In p. 47, the author begins to 
fpeak of his former book, and of himfelf: " ^ftimantur tamen 
plerumque libri authorum vel patronorum titulis^ ut divitee 
gemmis, 

* cui annulus ingens, 



* atque ideo pluris quam Cottus agehat/ 



Ft n'fi typographis hoc fupplementum vili venifTet, qui egenti 
et nudo nullam laboris mei mercedem porrigere aufi funt, vel 
praeli impenfas facere, fuo lucro metuentes, diu antehac hanc 
fecundam Apologiam publici juris fecifiem* Sed fi Salmafius, vel 
Heinfius, vel quis magni nominis mea pra?flgeretur, fperno 
fprctus, cum Heinfii Socratis pulchro fortafTe pulchritudine 
certaret. Sed meam intra anni fpatium decorticare periculum 
fecit quidam Johannes, an alter ct idem Miltonus ? Philippus, vet 
Pfeudo Phi/ippus? cui ratio non eft quod ipfe fuccenferem, qui, 
errando circa authorem Apologia:, me dignitatc epifcopali honoravity 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. SS 

But it was thought fubiervient perhaps to the confe- 
quence of the caufe, to exhibit its namelefs opponent 
as a man of the moft diftinguiihed talents. In this 
year Sir Robert Filmer's Animadversions on Milton's 
Defenfw, Hobbes's Leviathan, and Grotius's De Jure 
Belli, were likewife publimed. They were unnoticed 
by Milton. In 1652 alfo, the following publication 
appeared in d Dublin againft him: " Carolus I. a 
fecuri et calamo Miltoni vindicatus." And in 1653, 

et Epifcopwn Dirrcmim, aulicorum facerdotum primipilum, omni 
vitiorura labe maculavit. — .Quoad caetera, Philip-pus, ievis veles, 
in tricis et quifquiliis fer& totum fe exercet circa linguae Latinas 
puritatem, cum raihi a 14 annis nee grammatica nee dictiona- 
rium fuerit, quam quas cerebro meo mecura circumferre poffim ; 
et tamen hifce phantafmatibus^ verbis* et tropis incauti leclores 
capiuntur, tanquam Prifciani vel Defpauterij caufa ageretur, 
qui, quoniam in re tain ieria tam pueriiiter ineptit, non aliud h 
me refponfum expcclabit quam quod hoc difticho compra- 
hen dam : 

Phy notaf ceteris Lippzts m&lus omnibus horis, 
Et malus et Lippus, totus malus ergo Philippus. 

Non fum enim Johannes Bramalius Epifcopus Dirraeus aulicUS, 
Fed Johannes Rowlandus Anglicus* Paftor Ecclefiae particularism 
et tamen nominis mei me non pudet, quod in Ecclefias ortho- 
doxum, olim in proverbium cefiit, Rotvlmtdus pro Olivero, &c."' 
Cap. 5. Ad fin. — I have now to communicate bifhop Bramhairs 
own remark, obligingly tranfmitted to me from Ireland by the 
Rev. Edward Berwick, (of Efker near Leixlip,) who, in looking 
over fome original letters of the bifhefp, difcovered the inform- 
ation in one of them addrefied to his fon under an aflumed 
name, and dated at Antwerpe in May 16*54. " That filly book 
which he [Milton] afcribes to me, was written by one John 
Rowland, who fince hath replied upon him. I never read a 
word either of the iirlt book or of the replie in my life.'"' 

d This is noticed in Rawlinfoivs Method of Judging Hi/lory. 
vol* ii. p. 475, I have fought for it in vain, 

G 2 



84 SOME ACCOUNT 0* THE LIFE 

at Leyden, " Cafpari Ziegleri Lipfienfis circa Regi* 
cidium Anglorum exercitationes. Accedit Jacobi 
Schalleri Differtatio ad loca quaedam Miltoni." 
Zeigler has thought proper thus to infult the great 
poet : " Jam vero, in dictis S. Scripturae interpo- 
Jandis et enervandis, quantus artifex eft Miltonus ! 
Jefuitis felicior, ipfo Diabolo audacior I" Ad Lee* 
torem Benevolum ! ! Schaller is not fo much difpofed 
to abufe. 

Milton, when he was firft made Latin Secretary, 
removed from his houle in Holborn to lodgings in 
the vicinity of Whitehall ; and was at length fixed, 
with his family, in apartments prepared for him in 
Scotland-yard; where he loft an infant fon. His 
health being impaired, he chofe, however, in 1652, 
a more airy iituation ; and occupied a garden-houfe 
in Petty-France, Weftminfter, which opened into St. 
James's Park ; in which he continued till within a few 
weeks of the Reftor ation. In this abode he had not 
been fettled long, before he loft his firft wife in child- 
bed ; who left him three daughters. He afterwards 
married Catherine, the daughter of Captain Wood- 
cock of Hackney. She alio died in child-bed of a 
daughter, and within e a year after their marriage. 
Milton honoured her memory, and foothed his own 
fenfibility, in a tender Sonnet. 

He had become utterly blind two or three years 
before his fecond marriage ; having loft the ufe of his 
left eye in 1651, and, according to his biographers, 

e " Mrs. Catharine Milton, wife to John Milton, Efq. buried 
Feb. 10, 1657." Kifhop Rennet's MS. Collections for St. Mar- 
gareft Parifh, Weft miu Her, cited by Mr. Malcolm in his enter- 
taining llift. of London, 4to. vol. 4, r>. 128. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON, 85 

that of the other in 1654. But I am inclined to 
fuppofe, that he experienced the misfortune of total 
darknefs before the latter date. For, in Thurloe's 
State-Papers, there is the following pafTage in a letter 
from the Hague, dated 20. Junii, 1653. " f Vous 
aves en Angleterre un aveugle nomine* Milton, qui 
a le renom d' avoir bien efcrit." 

His enemies meanly triumphed in his blindnefs ; 
and imputed it as a judgement from heaven upon 
him for writing againlt the King. But his eyes had 
been gradually failing long before, owing to the mid- 
night ftudies of his youth. He had been cautioned 
by his phyficians, while he was writing his Defence 
of the People, to defift from the talk, if he valued 
the preservation of his fight; but he was undifmayed 
by their opinion, and did not hefitate to prefer what 
he thought his duty to his eyes ; and, after their orbs 
were quenched, he nobly tells us, that, while he 
defpifed the refentment of thofe who rebuked his 
darknefs, he did not want the charity to forgive them. 
At the defire of his friend Leonard Philaras, a cele- 
brated Athenian, and ambafiadour from the Duke of 
Parma at Paris, (who had written an encomium of 
his Defence?) he fent him a particular account of his 
calamity ; not without an expectation, which alas ! 
was never gratified, of deriving benefit from the 
opinion of Thevenot, a phyfician particularly dif- 
tinguillied as an oculift. Milton's curious and ad- 
mirable letter, which is the fifteenth of his Latin 
epiftles, has been tranflated by Mr. Richardfon and 
Mr. Hayley. In the more attractive language of 
the latter, I fubmit it to the reader. 

J Vel. i.p,281. 



86 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

<e As I have cheriihed from my childhood (if ever mortal 
did) a reverential fondnefs for the Grecian name, and for 
your native Athens in particular, fo have I continually per- 
fuaded myfelf, that at fome period I mould receive from that 
city a very fignal return for my benevolent regard : nor has 
the ancient genius of your moll noble country failed to rea- 
lize my prefage ; he has given me in you an Attick brother, 
and one moll tenderly attached to me. Though I was known 
to you only by my writings, and though your relidence was 
far diftant from mine, you firft addreffed me in the moil en- 
gaging terms by letter ; and afterwards coming unexpectedly 
to London, and vifiting the ftranger, who had no eyes to fee 
you, continued your kindnefs to me under that calamity, 
which can render me a more eligible friend to no one, and to 
many, perhaps, may make me an objeel; of difregard. 

u Since, therefore, you requeft me not to reject all hope 
of recovering my fight, as you have an intimate friend at 
Paris, in Thevenot the phyfician, who excels particularly in 
relieving ocular complaints, and whom you wifh to coniult 
concerning my eyes, after receiving from me fuch an account 
as may enable him to underftand the fource and fymptoms of 
my diforder, I will certainly follow your kind fuggeftion, that 
I may not appear to reje6l affiftance thus offered me, per- 
haps providentially. 

" It is about ten years, I think, fince I perceived my fight 
to grow weak and dim, finding at the fame time ray inteftines 
affli&ed with flatulence and opprefiion. 

" Even in the morning, if I began as ufual to read, my 
eyes immediately fuffered pain, and feemed to fhrink from 
reading, but, after fome moderate bodily exercife, were re- 
freftied ; whenever I looked at a candle I faw a fort of iris 
around it. Not long afterwards, on the left fide of my left 
eye (which began to fail fome years before the other) a dark- 
nefs arofe, that hid from me all things on that fide; — if 
I chanced to clofe my right eye, whatever was before me 
feemed diminiflied. — In the lail three years, as my remaining 
eye failed by degrees fome months before my fight was utterly 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 8? 

gone, all things that I could difcern, though I moved not 
myfelf, appeared to fluctuate, now to the right, now to the 
left. Obftinate vapours feem to have fettled all over my 
forehead and my temples, overwhelming my eyes with a fort 
of fleepy heavinefs, efpecially after food, till the evening ; fo 
that I frequently recollect the condition of the prophet Phi- 
neus in the Argonauticks ; 

« ( Him vapours dark 

' Envelop'd, and the earth appeared to roll 
* Beneath him, finking in a lifelefs trance/ 

But I mould not omit to fay, that while I had fome little 
fight remaining, as foon as I went to bed, and reclined on 
either fide, a copious light ufed to dart from my clofed eyes ; 
then, as my light grew daily lefs, darker colours feemed to 
burft forth with vehemence, and a kind of internal noife ; 
but now, as if every thing lucid were extinguimed, blacknefs, 
either abfolute or chequered, and interwoven as it were with 
am -colour, is accultomed to pour itfelf on my eyes; yet the 
darknefs perpetually before them, as well during, the night as 
in the day, feems always approaching rather to white than 
to black, admitting, as the eye rolls, a minute portion of 
light as through a crevice. 

" Though from your phyfician fuch a portion of hope alfo 
may arife, yet, as under an evil that admits no cure, I regu- 
late and tranquillize my mind, often reflecting, that fince the 
days of darknefs allotted to each, as the wife man reminds 
us, are many, hitherto my darknefs, by the fingular mercy of 
God, with the aid of ftudy, leifure, and the kind converfation 
of my friends, is much lefs opprefiive than the deadly dark- 
nefs to which he alludes. For if, as it is written, man lives 
not by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from 
the mouth of God, why mould not a man acquiefce even in 
this ? not thinking that he can derive light from his eyes 
alone, but efteeming himfelf fufficiently enlightened by the 
conduct or providence of God. 

" As long therefore, as he looks forward, and provides for 
me as he does, and leads me backward and forward by the 



88 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

hand, as it were, through my whole life, mall I not cheerfully 
bid my eyes keep holiday, flnce fuch appears to be his plea- 
sure ? But whatever may be the event of your kindnefs, my 
dear Philaras, with a mind not lefs refolute and firm than if 
I were Lynceus himfelf, I bid you farewell. Wejiminfter, 
Sept. 28, 165 1." 

Thus " content, though blind," he continued to 
exercife his abilities with his accuftomed animation. 
For, as Dr. Johnfon remarks, his mind was too eager 
to be diverted, and too itrong to be fubdued. An 
affiftant, however, was allowed him in his office of 
Latin Secretary ; and his falary was continued. In 
1654, he publiihed his " Defeniip Secunda pro Po- 
pulo Anglicano, contra infamem libellum anonymum, 
cui titulus, Regit fanguinis clamor ad coelum adverfus 
parricidas Anglicanos" Of the book, which excited 
this reply, the author was Peter du Moulin the 
younger, afterwards prebendary of Canterbury. He 
had tranfmitted his papers to Salmafius, by whom 
they were entruited, for publication, to Alexander 
Morus. Du Moulin had been already in too much 
danger not to know the neceffity of concealment. 
In the late King's fervice he had written his " Apo~ 
logie de la Religion Reformed, et de la Monarchic, 
et de I' Eglife d' Angleterre, &c." which, he has him- 
felf recorded, " g was begun at York, during the 
fiege, in a roome whofe chimney was beaten downe 
by the cannon while I was at my work ; and, after 
the fiege and my expulfion from the re&ory at Whei- 

s From the copy of his book in the Library of Canterbury 
Cathedral, numbered L. iv. 50.; the flrft five leaves of which 
contain a manufcript relation, written with his own hand, of his 
fer vices in the caufe of royalty. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 89 

drake, it was fi-niiht in an underground cellar, where 
I lay hid to anoyd warrants that were out againji 
me from Committees to apprehend me and carry me 
prifoner to Hull. — Much about the fame time I fet 
out my Latin poeme Ecclefice Gennitus with a long 
epiftle to all Chriftians in defence of the King and 
the Church of England ; and two years after Clamor 
regii fanguinis ad coelum" Here is a confirmation 
then, if confirmation were h wanting, that Milton had 
miftaken the publisher for the author. Milton, in 
his Second Defence, has treated Morus with equal 
fe verity and ridicule. Morus replied in his Fides 
Publica, into which were interwoven, with the vain 
hope of blunting the keennefs of Milton's fatire, tef- 
timonies of character, and a difavowal of the book, 
JDu Moulin was now again in great danger. His 
difmayed publilher gave his enemies the means of 
dilcovering him; but they fufFered him to efcape, 
rather than they would publickly convict Milton of 
his errour. Milton, on being informed that Du 
Moulin, and not Morus, was the author of the 
Clamor ', is faid to have replied, " ! Well ! that was 
all one, he having writt it [his Second Defence], it 
fliould goe into the world ; one of them was as bad 
as the other." Morus, however, is ftill the object of 
his attack in his Authoris pro fe Defenjio, publifhed 
in 1655, as a reply to the Fides Publica. Morus 
ventured to rejoin in a Supplementum, which was 
foon fiLenced by a brief Refpoiifio from Milton ; and 
the controverfy clofed. 

b See the Note on the Epigram In Morum* 
1 Aubrey's MS, 



90 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LltE 

He now gave himfelf up to his private ftudies, and 
to the duties of his office. As Latin Secretary, he 
is juftly fuppofed to have written the Protector's De- 
claration of the reafons for a war with Spain, in 1655, 
The peculiar elegance of the ftyle befpeaks the author. 
He had before addreifed, in the name of Cromwell^ 
the celebrated Latin verfes to Chriftina, queen of 
Sweden. For Milton, rather than Marvell, I think, 
has the foireft pretenfions to be their owner k . 

As Milton is believed * to have continued his 
friendihip for Henry Lawes, the mufician, through- 
out the Rebellion, I am led to think that he now 
often experienced a pleafing relaxation from bufinefs 
and ftudy in liftening to the " foft pipe, and fmooth- 
dittied fong," of his early acquaintance* Lawes, 
who was acquainted with the principal poets of his 
time, and was honoured with many of their pro- 
ductions for the ufe of his lyre, had now publilhed 
two Books of Ayrts ; in the latter of which, dated 
1655, is a ballad, which " The Table, with the names 
of thofe who were the Authors of the Verfes," afcribes 
to " Mr. I. M. p. 37." The ballad confifts of the firft 
and laft fextains of a little poem, which had appeared 
not long before in an edition of Shakfpeare's poems ; 
at the end of which is " An Addition of fome excel- 
lent poems, to thofe precedent of renowned Shak- 
fpeare, by other Gentlemen ;" but thefe verfes are 
without any fignature, while Milton's epitaph on 
Shakfpeare, in the fame volume, is fubfcribed I. M, 

k See the Notes on Par. Reg. B. ii. 481, and on the Verfes to 
Chriftina. 

1 Account of Henry Lawes, prefixed to Comvs. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. gi 

It may not perhaps feem improbable, that Milton 
might formerly have acknowledged to Lawes this 
production of his earlier days, which yet he had not 
thought worthy of admiffion into his collection of 
poems. The little poem Ihows at leaft a remarkable 
familiarity with Sylvefter's Du Bartas ; a book, in 
which Milton was m affuredly converfant. I fubmit 
the verfes, with deference, to the determination of 
the reader, 

" Lavinia walking in afrofly morning* 

** Y the non-age of a winter's day, 
i( Lavinia, glorious as May, 
u To give the morne an n earlier birth, 
iC Paced a mile of crufted earth, 
*< ° When each place, by which fhe came, 
** From her veines conceiv'd a flame. 
f< The amorous plants began to ilrive, 
" Which mould firft be fenfitive ; 
<e Every hoary-headed twigge 
se Dropp'd his fnowy perriwigge, 
f f And each bough his icy beard : 
4< On either fide his walkes were heard 
t( Whifpers of decrepit wood, 
i€ Calling to their rootes for blood : 
"" The gentle foyle did mildly greete 
*' The welcome kifles of her feete ; 
" And, to retaine fuch a treafure, 
(t Like wax diffolving, took her meafure. 
u Lavinia flood amaz'd to fee 
,( Things of yearly p certaintie 

m See the Inquiry into the Origin of Par, Zo/?, 
n In Lawes's copy, " an eajier birth/' 
• In Lawes's copy, " Where every place/' 
P In Lawes'g copy, ° yearly ccnjiancie.'* 



92 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

u Thus to rebel againft their feafon : 
u And, though a ftranger to the reafon, 
" q Back retiring quench'd their heate, 
" And Winter r tooke his former feate." 

It has been already obferved, that Milton was 
fupplied with an affiftant in his office of Secretary- 
In 1657 Andrew Marvell was aflbciated with him in 
this duty ; before which time, Marvell aflerts that he 
" * never had any, not the remoteft, relation to pub- 
lick matters, nor correfpondence with the perfons 
then predominant ;" but that he then " enter'd into 
an imployment, for which he was not altogether im- 
proper, and which he confider'd to be the moft innocent 
and inofTenfive toward his Majefties affairs of any in 
that ufurped and irregular Government to which all 
men were then expofed. And this he accordingly 
difcharg'd without difobliging any one perfon ; there 
having been opportunity and endeavours, fmce his 
Majefties happy return, to have difcover'd had it been 
other wife." So manly an avowal cannot but com- 
mand refpect. — Of Marvell's regard for Milton, the 
verfes, ufually prefixed to Paradife Loft, are an ele- 
gant teftimony. In the volume, from which I have 
made the preceding citation, are feveral anecdotes of 
Milton and his friends, not generally known, as Mr, 
Warton long fince obferved. This fecond part of 
Marvell's Rehear falTranfprosd, publifhed in 1673, 
is an attack on Dr. Samuel Parker, well known for 
his tergiverfation with the times; and of whom it was 

*« In Lawcs's copy, " Back returning quenchM the heat." 
r In Lawes's copy, " Anc} Winter kept." 
* Rehearfall Tranfpros'd, Sec. Part, p. 127. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 93 

once faid that he " * had wit enough to colour any thing 
though never fo foule, and impudence enough to affirm 
any thing though never fo falfe." When Marvell 
attacked him with farcaftick and fuccefsful raillery, 
Parker was an antipuritan in the extreme. Marvell 
thus expreifes his honeft indignation againft Parker 
for traducing his friend Milton, p. 377* 

" You do three times at lead in your Reproof, and in 
your Tranfprofer Rehearsed well nigh half the book thorow, 
run upon an author J. M., which does not a little offend me. 
For why mould any other man's reputation fuffer in a conteft 
betwixt you and me ? But it is becaufe you refolved to fufpeci 
that he had an hand in my former book, [the firft part of 
The Rehear/all, publifhed in 1672 J wherein, whether you 
deceive yourfelf or no, you deceive others extreamly. For 
by chance I had not feen him of two years before ; but, 
after I undertook writing, I did more carefully avoid either 
viliting or fending to him, leit I mould any way involve him 
in my confequences. And you might have underftood, or I 
am fure your friend, the author of the Common Places, 
could have told you, (he too had a flam at J. M. upon my 
account,) that had he took you in hand, you would have had 
caufe to repent the occafion, and not efcaped fo eaiily as you 
did under my Tranfprofal. — But becaufe in your 1 15. p. you 
are fo particular you know a friend of ours, &c. intending 
that J. m. and his anfvver to Salmafius, I think it here fea- 
fonable to acquit my promife to you in giving the reader a 
fhort trouble concerning my firft acquaintance with you. 
J. M. was, and is, a man of as great learning and iharpnefs 
of wit as any man. It was his misfortune, living in a tu- 
multuous time, to be toffed on the wrong fide ; and he writ, 
flagrante hello, certain dangerous treatifes. — At his majefty's 
happy return, J. M. did partake, as you yourfelf did, for all 
your huffing, of his royal clemency, and has ever iince ex- 

1 Preface to " A Caveat to the Cavaliers, 166V* 



94 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

piated himfelf in a retired filence. It was after that, I well 
remember it, that, being one day at his houfe, I there firft 
met you, and accidentally. — Then it was, when you, as I 
told you, wandered up and down Morefields, aftrologizing 
upon the duration of his majefty's government, that you 
frequented J. M. inceflantly, and haunted his houfe day by 
day. What difcourfes you there ufed> he is too generous to 
remember. But he never having in the leaft provoked you> 
for you to infult thus over his old age> to traduce him by your 
fcaramuccios, and in your own perfon, as a fchoolmafter^ 
who was born and hath lived more ingenuoufly and liberally 
than yourfelf ; to have done all this, and lay at laft my fimple 
book to his charge, without ever taking care to inform yourfelf 
better, which you had fo ealy an opportunity to do :— it is 
inhumanly and inhofpitabty done; and will, I hope, be a 
warning to all others, as it is to me, to avoid (I will not fay) 
fuch a Judas, but a man that creeps into all companies to 
jeer, trepan, and betray them/' 

Marvell, however, was miftaken in attributing the 
Tranfprofer Rehears d to Parker; which, as Mr. 
Warton remarks, was written by R. Leigh, formerly 
of Queen's College, Oxford, but then a player. It 
was printed at Oxford in 1673, " for the Affignes 
of Hugo Grot his , and Jacob Van Harmine, on 
the North-Jide of the Lake-Lemane /" A more fcur- 
rilous or indecent publication has feldom difgraced 
the prefs. The contemptible writer ridicules the 
Paridife Loft, becaule it is written in blank verfe, 
p. 30; and for the fame reafon calls Milton a 
fchifmatick in poetry, p. 43. He defences the poet 
as groping for a beam of liglit in that fublime apof- 
trophe, " Hail, My Light, &c." p. 43. And he 
reproaches lain as a Latin Secretary and an EngliJIi 
Schoolmafter, p. 128. With the obfeenities of this 
fcribbler I will not foil thefe pages. I mull add that 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 95 

the Reproof in which Milton is called a friend of 
ours, was certainly written by Parker. But Parker's 
** friendly voice" was afterwards changed. Neither 
Milton nor Marveli, however, lived to read the 
abufe, which Parker beftowed. on both of them in 
his pofthumous Comment aril ful temporis; of which 
Mr. Warton has given the following tranflated paflage, 
relating to the pamphleteers againft the royal party 
at Cromwell's acceffion. 

" Among thefe calumniators was a rafcal, one Marveli. 
As he had fpent his youth in debauchery, fo, from natural 
petulance, be became the tool of faction, in the quality of 
fatyrift: yet with more fcurrility than wit, and with a me- 
diocrity of talents, but not of ill-nature. Turned out of 
doors by his father, expelled the univerfity, a vagabond, a 
ragged and hungry poetafter, kicked and cudgelled in every 
tavern, he was daily chaftifed for his impudence. At length 
he was made under fecretary to Cromwell, by the procuration 
of Milton, to whom he was a very acceptable character, 
on account of a fimilar malevolence of difpoiition> &c." 
B. iv. p. 275. 

This paflage Was perhaps, written about the year 
1680, Paradife Loft, Mr. Warton adds, had now 
been publilhed thirteen years, and its excellencies 
muft have been fully eftimated and fufficiently known; 
yet in fuch terms of contempt, or rather neglect, 
was its author now defcribed, by a popular, writer, 
certainly a man of learning,, and very foon afterwards, 
a biftiop. Parker became: indeed a bifhop ; but he 
was alio the obtruded prefident of Magdalen. College, 
Oxford; the minion of apopilh king. 

From this, account reipe&ing Milton, and his 
affociate in office* we may return to the employment 
of the great poet, after the days of controversy were 



96 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

no more. His time now appears to have been de- 
Toted to the accomplifhment of three literary projects ; 
the hiftory of his country, an epick poem, and a new 
dictionary of the Latin tongue. Of this laft work 
the preparations, which he had made long before, 
and had occasionally continued till his death, were 
found fo difcompofed and deficient, as Phillips relates, 
that they could not be fitted for the prefs. From 
thefe preparations, however, perhaps originated the 
Cambridge Dictionary, publifhed in 1693 ; the editors 
of which acknowledge, that " they made three large 
folio volumes, containing a collection out of all the 
bed and pureft Roman authors." They were pro- 
bably communicated by Phillips, who is fuppofed to 
have been the laft pofTeffour of thefe claffical accu- 
mulations. 

In the mean time Milton amufed himfelf with the 
publication of fmaller productions ; of a .manuscript 
by Ralegh, entitled The Cabinet Council, in 1658 ; 
and of two tracts, in the fucceeding year ; the firft 
relating to the Civil Power in Ecclejiqftical Cafes, the 
laft to The Means of removing Hirelings out of the 
Church. It muft here be noticed, as another proof 
of his ftudious difpofition, that he had collected a va- 
riety of State Papers, from the death of the King 
to the prefent period, probably with a view to render 
them fubfervient to fome particular or general hiftory 
of his times. They were publifhed in 1743 with the 
following title: " Original Letters and Papers of 
State, addrcfted to Olivet Cromwell, concerning the 
Affairs of Great Britain. From the year 1649 to 
1658. Found among the Political Collections of 
Mr, John Milton. Now firft publifhed from the 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 97 

Originals. By John Nickolls, Jun. Member of the 
Society of Antiquaries, London." They had been 
once in the poffeffion of Etlwood. In this collection 
are two important letters written by Milton's friend, 
Colonel Overton ; and a character, drawn by Captain 
Bifhope, of another of Milton's particular friends, 
the lord preiident Bradfhaw ; harmonizing, in refpect 
to perfonal qualities, with his own molt eloquent 
eulogy of that regicide. The collection abounds alfo 
with choice efFufions of fanatick zeal, in addrefies to 
Cromwell and other fupporters of what Milton 
terms u The Good Old Caufe! In a letter to Colonel 
Robert Overton, p. 161, is the following parlage : 
" Sir, your friends befeech you to be much in the 
mount with God, who is the belt counfeler, and will 
ther be feen : This is no time to confult with fleih and 
blood." Then follows almoft immediately an unfor- 
tunate anticlimax to fuch impreffive eloquence, com- 
penfated inftantaneoufly, however, by the writer's 
blazing refumption of his favourite fubjeft ! " Sir, 
there is one Mifs Dawfon prefents herferrAce to you. 
To-morrow is kept a very folom day among fom 
heer, fatting and praiers ; fum devills are no other 
way caft out !" 

Oliver being dead, and Richard being obliged to 
refign the protectorfhip, Milton, upon the dilTolation 
of the parliament by the army, wrote A Letter con- 
cerning the ruptures of the Commonwealth. With 
a view to prevent the reftoration of kingly govern- 
ment, other republican pens were alfo bufily em- 
ployed. Not to mentioii the ftrenuous exertions of 

u Profe-Work?, vol. ii. p. 797- edit. K&S. 
vot, 1. H 



98 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LlFl 

Harrington, I have now before me " Idea Deitfff- 
cratica, or a Commonweal Platform/' and " A Model 
of a Democraticall Government, humbly tendered 
to confideration by a friend and well-wilher to this 
Common-wealth," both anonymous productions of 
1659. They minutely agree with Milton's Brief 
Delineation of a Free Commonwealth, addrefled to 
Monk in the fame year. But * "the fhip of the 
Commonwealth" could no longer be kept afloat: 
The gale of popular Opinion was now adverfe. Of 
the usurpation there were few who were not eager to 
make off the galling chains. The following lines of 
Lucretius may be coniidered as no dhTimilar picture 
of the prefent period, as well as of the triumphant 
reign of Cromwell. 

y " Ergo regibus oecifis ftibverfa jacebat 
" Priftina majeftas foliorum, et fceptra fuperba ; 
" Et capitis fummi prseclarum infigne cruentum 
se Sub pedibus volgi magnum lugebat honorem. 
* Nam cupide coneulcatur nimis ante metutum. 
u Res itaque ad fummam faecem turbafque redibat, 
" Imperium libi cum, ac fummatum, quifque petebat* 
" Inde magiitratum partim docuere creare, 

Juraque conftituere, ut vellent legibus uti : 
" Nam genus humanum, defeifum vi colere aevum, 
tc Ex inimicitiis languebat ; quo magis ipfum 
M Sponte fua cecidit fub leges, aicMque jura." 

Milton, however, not long before the King's re- 
turn, published The ready and eafy Way to eftahlijh 
a Free Commonwealth ; which he hoped might not 
contain " the laft words of expiring liberty." The 

■ See Milton's Profe-Works, vol. ii. p#789. edit. 169s. 
y Lib. v. Ter. 1135. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. f)j> 

pamphlet gave rife z both to a ferious, and to a ludi- 
crous, reply. He afterwards publilhed Brief Notes 
upon a Sermon preached in March 1659-60, by Dr. 
Matthew Griffith, called The Fear of God and the 
King. Thefe Notes were immediately anfwered by 
L'Eftrange in a pamphlet, infultingly denominated 
No Blind Guides. 

Perceiving the return of the King to be unavoid- 
able, he was obliged to quit the houfe which he occu- 
pied as Latin Secretary, and in which he had lived 
eight years with great reputation; vifited by all 
foreigners of diftinction, and by feveral perfons of 
quality in his own country, particularly by Lady 
Ranelagh, whofe fon had been his pupil. It appears, 
from Aubrey's relation, that feveral foreigners had 
been induced to vifit England, in order " chiefly to 
fee Oliver Cromwell lord protector, and Mr. John 
Milton." In the execution of his office Milton had 
acquired indeed the higheit credit. His State-Letters> 
which are publilhed, are juftly admired by criticks 
and politicians, and eminently befpeak the vigour 
and fenfibility of his active mind. They are entitled 
" Literae Senatus Anglicani, necnon Cromwelli, &c. 
nomine ac juffu confcriptae." They have been trans- 
lated into Englifh; in which drefs they appeared, 
with his Life prefixed by Phillips, in 1694. 

Milton at the Reftoration withdrew, for a time, 
to a friend's houfe in Bartholomew-Clofe. By this 
precaution he probably efcaped the particular pro- 
fecution which was at firft directed againft him. 

x See the Notes on the 21ft Sonnet, and the Ode to.Rpufe. 
H 2 



ICO SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Mr. Warton was a told by Mr. Tyers from good 
authority, that, when Milton was under profecution 
with Goodwin, his friends, to gain time, made a 
mock-funeral for him ,* and that when matters were 
fettled in his favour, and the affair was known, the 
King laughed heartily at the trick. This circum- 
ftance has been alfo related by an hiftorian b lately 
brought to light ; who fays that Milton " pretended 
to be dead, and had a publick funeral proceffion," 
and that " the King applauded his policy in efcaping 
the punifhment of death, by a feafonable lliew of 
dying." His Eiconoclajies and Defenjio pro Populo 
Anglicano were, however, configned to the moil 
publick difgrace. It was the refolution of the Com- 
mons, on the 16th of June 1660, that his Majefty 
Ihould be " c humbly moved to call in Milton's two 
books, and that of John Goodwin, [The ObftntBors 
of Jif/iice,] written in j unification of the murder of 
the late King, and order them to be burnt by the 
common hangman ; and that the Attorney-General 
do proceed againft them by indictment or otherwife." 
Dr. Johnfon thinks that Milton was not very dili- 
gently purfued. It is certain that he very fuccefsfully 
concealed himfelf. The proclamation for appre- 
hending him, and his bold compeer, particularly 
notices that " d the faid John Milton and John 
Goodwin are fo fled, or i'o obfcure themfelves, that 
no endeavours ufed for their apprehenfion can take 

* See his Second Edition of Milton's Smaller Poems, p. 358. 
b Cunningham's Ilift. of Great Britain, vol. i. p. 14. 

c Journals of the Houfe of Commons. 

* See the Proclamation printed at length in Kcnnet's Regifter 
and Chronicle, 1728, p. 18Q. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 101 

effecl;, whereby they may be brought to legal 
tryal, and defervedly receive condign punifhment 
for their treafons and offences." Of the profcribed 
books feveral copies were committed to the flames 
on the 27th of Auguft. Within three days after the 
burning thefe offenfive publications, he found him- 
felf relieved, by the Act of Indemnity, from the 
neceffity of concealment. Goodwin was incapa- 
citated, as Dr. Johnfon obferves, with nineteen 
more, for any publick trult; but of Milton there 
was no exception. He was afterwards, however, in 
the cuftody of the Serjeant at arms ; for on Saturday 
the loth of December, 1660, it was ordered, by 
the Houfe of Commons, " e that Mr. Milton, now 
in cuftody of the Serjeant at arms, attending this 
Houfe, be forthwith releafed, paying his fees" 
And, on Monday the 17th, " a complaint being made 
that the Serjeant at arms had demanded exceffive fees 
for the imprifonment of Mr. Milton; it was ordered, 
that it be referred to the Committee for Privileges 
to examine this bufinefs, and to call Mr. Mead the 
Serjeant before them, and to determine what is fit 
to be given to the Serjeant for his fees in this cafe." 
Milton is fuppofed to have had powerful friends both 
in Council and Parliament ; as Secretary Morice, Sir 
Thomas Clarges, and Andrew Marvell. But the 
principal inftrument in obtaining Milton's pardon is 
faid to have been Sir William Davenant, who, when 
he was taken prifoner in 1650, had been faved by 
Milton's intereft, and who now, in grateful return 
for lb fignal an obligation, interceded for the life of 

c Journals of the Houfe of Commons. 



102 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Milton. This ftory has been related by Richardfon 
upon the authority of Pope, who received it from 
Betterton, the protege" of Davenant. Aubrey, in 
his manuicript Life of Davenant f , afcribes his fafety, 
without mention of Milton, to two aldermen of 
York. 

Milton, having obtained his pardon, took a 
lioufe in Holborn near Red-Lion-Fields ; but foon 
removed to Jewin-ftreet, near Alderfgate. Here he 
married his third wife, Elizabeth Minfhull, of a 
genteel family in Cheihire. She was a relation of 
Dr. Paget, his particular friend, whom he had re- 
queued to recommend a proper confort for him. It 
may here be obferved, that he chofe his three wives 
out of the virgin ftate. Indeed he tells us that he 
entirely agreed " g with them who, both in prudence 
and elegance of fpirit, would chooie a virgin of 
mean fortunes, honeftly bred, before the wealthieft 
widow." Soon after this laft marriage, he is faid 
to have been offered the continuance of his employ- 
ment of Latin Secretary, and to have h magnani- 
moufly declined it. It was while he lived in Jewin- 
ftreet, that Ellwood the quaker was recommended to 
him as a perfon who, for the advantage of his con- 
versation, would read to him fuch Latin books as he 
thought proper ; an employment to which he attended 
every afternoon, except on Sundays. 

f Sec the Hid. Account of the Englifh Stage, Steevens's 
Shakfpeare, edit. 1793. vol. ii. p. 431. 
e Profe-VVorks, vol. i. p. 191. cd. l6'98. 
h See the Note f to the Nuncupative Will. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 103 

<* At. -my firft fitting to him," this ingenuous * writer in- 
forms us, in his Life of himfelf, " obferving that I ufed the 
JEnglifh pronunciation, he told me, if I would have the be- 
nefit of the Latin tongue, not only to read and understand 
Latin authors, but to converfe with foreigners, either abroad 
or at home, I mull learn the foreign pronunciation ; to this 
I confenting, he inftru&ed me how to found the vowels : This 
change of pronunciation proved a new difficulty to me ; 
jbut ( labor omnia vincit improbus ;' and fo did I ; which 
made my reading the more acceptable to my mailer. He, 
on the other hand, perceiving with what earnefl defire I 
purfued learning, gave me not only all the encouragement, 
but all the help, he could; for, having a curious ear, he 
underflood by my tone when I underilood what I read, and 
when I did not ; and accordingly he would flop me, and 
Examine me, and open the moft difficult paflages to me." 

The kind care beftowed by Milton upon the im- 
provement of this young man was repaid by every 
mark of perfonal regard. The courtefy of the pre- 
ceptor ? and the gratitude of the difciple, are indeed 

1 " The early life of Eliwood," Mr. Warton has remarked, 
** exhibits exactly the progrefs of an enthufiaft. Having been a 
profligate youth, and often whipped at fchool twice a day, he 
was fuddenly reclaimed by accidentally hearing a Quaker's 
fermon. He then had the felicity of following the Heps of St. 
Paul, in fuffering bonds and imprifonment. But thofe flight 
evils did not reach the fpiritual man. He found the horrours 
of a jail to be green and flowery pailures, refrefhed withthe foun- 
tain of grace. lie confpled himfelf as Shakfpeare fays, with * a 
fnufF in a dungeon/ The hillory of his defultory life, written by 
himfelf, and from which I colled thefe anecdotes, is filled with idle 
rambles and adventures, foolifti fcraps of poetry, and fanatical 
opinions. 1 except thofe paflages which relate to Milton, as 
^lfo the bell and moll curious part of the defcription of Bride- 
well and Newgate, then the ufual receptacles of preaching ap» 
prentices, and frequently more full of faints than felons/' 



104 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

alike confpicuous. After feveral adventures, which 
were no flight trials of patience, Ellwood found an 
afylum in the houfe of an affluent quaker at Chalfont 
in Buckinghamihire, whole children he was to in- 
ftrucl. This fituation afforded him an opportunity 
of being ferviceable to Milton. For, when the plague 
began to rage in London in 1665, Ellwood took a 
houfe for him at k Chalfont St. Giles ; to which the 
poet retired with his family. He had not long before 

k Dr. Birch, in his Life of Milton, has printed a Sonnet, faid 
to be written by Milton in 1665, when he retired to Chalfont in 
Buckinghamfhire on account of the plague; and to have been 
feen inferibed on the glafs of a window in that place. I have 
feen a copy of it written, apparently in a coeval hand, at the 
end of Tonfon's edition of Milton's Smaller Poems in 1713, 
where it is alfo faid to be Milton's. It is re-printed, from Dr. 
Birch's Life of the poet, in Fawkcs and Woty's Poetical Calendar, 
1763, vol. viii. p. 6j, But, in this Sonnet there is a fcriptural 
miftake ; which, as Mr. Warton has obferved, Milton was not 
likely to commit. For the Sonnet improperly represents David 
as punifhed by peftilence for his adultery with Bathflieba. Mr. 
Warton, however, adds, that Dr. Birch had been informed by 
Vertuc the engraver, that he had feen a fatirical medal, ftruck 
upon Charles the fecond, abroad, without any legend, having a 
correfpondent device. — This Sonnet, I mould add^ varies from 
the conftruclion of the legitimate Sonnet, in confuting of only 
ten lines, inftead of fourteen, 

Fair mirrour of foul times ! whofe fragile (been 
Shall, as it blazetli, break; while Providence, 
Aye watching o'er his faints with eye unfeen, 
Spreads the red rod of angry peftilence, 
To fweep the wicked and their counfels hence: 

Yen, all to break the pride of luftfull kings, 
Who heaven's lore reject for brutifh fehfe ; 
As erft he fcourgM JeflideV fin of yore, 
For the fair Hittite, when, on ferapVs vdfYgs, 
He fent him war, or plague, or famine fore, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 103 

removed from Jewin-ftreet to a houfe in Artillery 
Walk, leading to Bunhill-fields. On his arrival at 
Chalfont he found that Ellwood, in confequence of a 
perfecution of the quakers, was confined in the gaol 
of Aylefbury. But, being foon releafed, this affec- 
tionate friend made a vifit to him, to welcome him 
into the country. " After fome common difcourfes," 
fays Ellwood, " had paffed between us, he called for 
a manufcript of his, which, being brought, he delivered 
to me, bidding me take it home with me, and read it 
at my leifure, and when I had fo done, return it to 
him with my judgement thereupon. When I came 
home, and fet myfelf to read it, I found it was that 
excellent poem, which he entitled Paradife Loft? 
From this account it appears that Paradife Loft was 
complete in 1665. 

Next year, when the city was cleanfed, and the 
danger of infection ceafed, he returned to Bunhill- 
fields, and defigned the publication of his great poem. 
Some biographers have fuppofed that he began to 
mould the Paradife Loft into an epick form, foon 
after he was difengaged from the controverfy with 
Salmafius. Aubrey fays, that he began the work 
about two years before the Reftoration. However, 
confidering the difficulties, as Dr. Newton well re- 
marks, " under which the author lay, his uneafinefs 
on account of the publick affairs and his own, his 
age and infirmities, his not being in circumftances to 
maintain an amanuenfis, but obliged to make ufe of 
any hand that came next to write his verfes as he 
made them, it is really wonderful that he mould have 
the fpirit to undertake fuch a work, and much more 



106 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

that he fhould ever bring it to perfection." Yet his 
tuneful voice was 

■ " unchang'd 

" To hoarfe or mute, though fallen on evil days, 
" On evil days though fallen, and evil tongues ; 
" In darknefs, and with dangers compafs'd round, 
« And folitude." , 

To Milton indeed the days might now feem evil. But 
to fo pathetick a complaint cold muft be the heart of 
him who can liften without compaffiom It reminds 
us of the mufical but melancholy ftrains, addreffed 
by his favourite Taffo in a Sonnet to Stiglian, whom 
he falutes as advancing on the road to Helicon : 
" Ivi prende mia cetra ad un cipreffo : 
" Salutala in mio nome, e dalle avvifo, 
" CK iofon da gli anni e da fort una opprejjb" 

The laft of Milton's familiar Letters in Latin, ad- 
dreffed to Peter Heimbach, an accomplifhed German, 
who is ftyled counfellor to the elector of Branden- 
burgh, (and who is fuppofed, by an expreffion in a 
former epiftle from Milton to him, to have refided 
with the poet, when he vifited England, in the cha- 
racter of a difciple,) relates his confideration on his 
prefent circumftances, and his reflection on the days 
that were gone, in a moft interelting manner. With 
the tranflation of this letter by his moft affectionate 
and fpirited biographer, Mr. Hayley, the reader will 
be gratified. 

" If among fo many l funerals of my couutrymen, in a 
ear fo full of peftilence and forrow, you were induced, as 

1 Even at Chalfont, whither he had retired from the danger 
of infection, infection had appeared. For in the Ilegiflcr of the 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 107 

you fay, by rumour to believe that I alfo was fnatched away, 
it is not furprifing ; and if fuch a rumour prevailed among 
thofe of your nation, as it feems to have done, becaufe they 
were folicitous for my health, it is not unpleafing, for I muft 
efteem it as a proof of their benevolence towards me. But 
by the gracioufnefs of God, who had prepared for me a fafe 
retreat in the country, I am ftill alive and well ; and I truft 
not utterly an unprofitable fervant, whatever duty in life there 
yet remains for me to fulfil. That you remember me, after 
fo long an interval in our correfpondence, gratifies me ex- 
ceedingly, though, by the politenefs of your expreflion, you 
feem to afford me room to fufpecl:, that you have rather for- 
gotten me, fince, as you fay, you admire in me fo many dif- 
ferent virtues wedded together. From fo many weddings I 
mould affuredly dread a family too numerous, were it not 
certain that, in narrow circumftances and under feverity of 
fortune, virtues are moil excellently reared, and are mod 
tlourifhing. Yet one of thefe faid virtues has not very hand- 
ibmely rewarded me for entertaining her ; for that which you 
call my political virtue, and which I mould rather wifh you 
to call my devotion to my country, (enchanting me with her 
captivating name,) almoft, if I may fay fo, expatriated me. 
Other virtues, however, join their voices to affure me, that 
wherever we profper in rectitude there is our country. In 
ending my letter, let me obtain from you this favour, that if 
you find any parts of it incorrectly written, and without ftops, 
you will impute it to the boy who writes for me, who is 
utterly ignorant of Latin, and to whom I am forced 
(wretchedly enough) to repeat every fingle fyllable that I 
dictate. I ftill rejoice that your merit as an accomplished 
man, whom I knew as a youth of the higheft expectation, 
has advanced you fo far in the honourable favour of your 
prince. For your profperity in every other point you have 

parifh, under the year 1665, two perfons are recorded, as I have 
been obligingly informed by letter from the refident clergyman, 
to have died of thejicJtnefs ; [fo the Plague was denominated ;] 
one of whom is called a ftranger, and died at the Manor Houfe. 



10S SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

both my wifties and my hopes. Farewell. London, Auguft 
15, 1666." 

After the poem had been made ready for publi- 
cation, it is faid to have been in danger of being fup.- 
prefied by the licenfer, who imagined that, in the 
noble m fimile of the fun in an eclipfe, he had dif- 
covered treafon. The licenfer's hefitation is a ftriking 
example of Lord Lyttleton's acute remark, that 
" n the politicks of Milton at that time brought his 
poetry into difgrace ; for it is a rule with the Englifli ; 
they fee no good in a man whofe politicks they di/like" 
• Licenfed, however, the poem was ; and Milton fold 
his copy, April 27, 1667, to Samuel Simmons, for 
an immediate payment of five pounds. But the 
agreement with the bookfeller entitled him to a con- 
ditional payment of five pounds more when thirteen 
hundred copies mould be fold of the firft edition ; of 
the like fum after the fame number of the fecond 
edition ; and of another five pounds after the fame 
fale of the third. The number of each edition was 
not to exceed fifteen hundred copies. It firft ap- 
peared in 1667, in ten books. In the hiftory of 
Paradife Lqfi, Dr. Johnfon has obferved that a re- 
lation of minute circumftances will rather gratify 
than fatigue. Countenanced by fuch authority, I 

ra B. i. 594, &c 

n Dialogues of the Dead. Dial. xiv. 

° Mr. Malone obferves, that the poem was entered in the Sta- 
tioners' Book by Samuel Symons, Aug. 20. 1669. Sec the Life 
of Dryden, 1800, vol. i. part i. p. 114. The title-pages of 
l6G7 and 1668, however, bear in front " Liccnjed and Entered 
according to Order.'* 1 have icon fcveral copies with the title* 
page of 166*9, in which this notification is omitted. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. log 

proceed to ftate that the poem, in a fmall quarto 
form, and plainly but neatly bound, was advertifed 
at the price of p three {hillings. The titles were 
varied, in order to circulate the edition, in 1667, 
1668, and 1669. Of thefe thefe there were no lefs 
than q Jive. In two years the fale gave the poet a 
right to his fecond payment, for which the receipt was 
figned April 26, 1669. The fecond edition was not 
given till 1674; it was printed in fmall octavo ; and, 
by a judicious divifion of the feventh and tenth, con- 
tained twelve books. He lived not to receive the pay- 
ment ftipulated for this impreffion. The third edition 
was publifhed in 1678 ; and his widow, to whom the 
copy was then to devolve, agreed with Simmons, the 
printer, to receive eight pounds for her right, ac- 
cording to her receipt dated December 21, 1680. 
Simmons had already covenanted to transfer the 
right, for twenty-five pounds, to Brabazon Aylmer, 
the bookfeller; and Aylmer fold to Jacob Tonfon 
half, Auguft 17, 1683, and the other half, March 24, 
1690, at a price confiderably advanced. 

Of the firft edition it has been obferved by Dr. 
Johnfon, that " the call for books was not in Milton's 
age what it is at prefent ; — the nation had been fatis- 
fledfrom 1623 to 1664, that is, forty-one years, with 
only two editions of the works of Shakfpeare, which 
probably did not together make one thoufand copies. 
The fale of thirteen hundred copies in two years, in 
oppofition to fo much recent enmity, and to a ftyle 

P In Clavel's Catalogue of all the books printed in England, 
fince the fire of London, in 1666 to the end of 167 2. Fol. 
Lond. 1673. 

* See the lift of Editions at the end of the Life. 



110 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

of verification new to all and difgufting to many, was 
an uncommon example of the prevalence of genius.'* 
This remark will always be read with peculiar grati- 
fication, as it exonerates our forefathers from the 
charge of being inattentive to the glorious blaze of a 
luminary, before which fo many ftars " dim their* 
ineffectual light." The demand, as Dr. Johnfon 
notices, did not immediately encreafe; becaufe 
" many more readers than were fupplied at firft, the 
nation did not afford. Only three thoufand were 
fold in eleven years ; for it forced its way without 
nffiftance ; its admirers did not dare to publiih their 
opinion; and the opportunities, now given, of at- 
tracting notice by advertifements were then very few. 
But the reputation and price of the copy ftill ad- 
vanced, till the Revolution put an end to the fecrecy 
of love, and Paradife Loft broke into open view 
with fufficient fecurity of kind reception. Fancy can 
hardly forbear to conjecture with what temper Milton 
furveyed the filent progrefs of his work, and marked 
its reputation ftealing its way in a kind of fubterra- 
neous current through fear and filence. I cannot 
but conceive him calm and confident, little difap- 
pointed, not at all dejected, relying on his own merit 
with fteady confeioufnefs, and waiting, without im- 
patience, the viciffitudes of opinion, and the impar- 
tiality of a future generation." 

Milton indeed may be confidered as an illuftrious 
example of patient merit. But his admirers were 
not long filent. Witnefs the fpirited verfes of Barrow 
and Marvell, prefixed to the fecond edition of the 
poem : Witnefs alfo the celebrated hexaftich of 
Dryden, which accompanies the fourth edition; as 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. ill 

Well as the liberal acknowledgement of his obligations 
to Paradife Loft, made almoft immediately after the 
death of Milton in the preface to his State of Inno- 
cence : " I cannot, without injury to the deceafed 
author of Paradife Loft, but acknowledge, that this 
poem has received its entire foundation, part of the 
defign and many of the ornaments from him. What 
I have borrowed will be fo eafily difcerned from my 
mean productions, that I lhall not need to point the 
reader to the places ; and truly I ihould be forry, 
for my own fake, that any one ihould take the pains 
to compare them together, the original being un- 
doubtedly one of the greateft, moft noble, and moft 
fublime poems, which either this age or nation has 
produced'' 

Among the circumftances of Milton's pofthumous 
renown may be mentioned, to the no fmall diverlion 
of the reader, the curious commendation contained 
in the Preface to " Poems in Two Parts ; Firft, an 
Interlocutory Difcourfe concerning the Creation, Fall, 
and Recovery of Man. Secondly, A Dialogue be- 
tween Faith and a Doubting Soul. By Samuel Slater. 
Lond. 1679" The author of thefe poems feems to 
have thought the gre$t bard, not however without 
fome animadverfion of his corretler pen, to have 
been worthy his imitation ! " I was much taken" he 
fays, " with learned Mr. Milton s caft and fancy in 
his book, [the Paradife Loft.] Him I have followed 
much in his method, and have been otherwife be- 
holding to him, how much I leave thee [Gentle 
Reader !] to judg : but I have ufed a more plain and 
familiar ftilc, becaufe I conceive it moft proper /" 
Thefe compofitions, the children of prepofterous con- 



112 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

ceit, would have been a valuable addition to the 
common-place books of Bayes, who alfo " loved to 
write familiarly F To the fame of Milton an elegant 
poetical tribute was paid in the fucceeding year by a 
writer, whom I have r conjectured to be Francis 
Cradock, a member of the fame club with Milton. 
The opinion and encouragement of Lord Somers 
foon afterwards occafioned the handfome folio edition 
of the Paradife Loft, which was publiihed by s fub- 
fcription, in 1688; to which is prefixed a lift of 
more than five hundred fubfcribers, among whom are 
all the moft diftinguiihed characters of that period. 
Atterbury exerted himfelf with zealous activity in the 
promotion of this honourable publication. In the 
preface to the Second Part of Wallers Poems, written 
by Atterbury, and printed in 1690; and in that to 
The Defign of part of the book of Ecclefiqftes, a 
poem by r W. W., printed in 1691, Milton's re- 
jection of rhyme is j cdicioufly commended. In 1 692, 
another ornamented edition of Paradife Loft, in folio, 
was publiihed ; and a third, with the copious and 
very learned commentary of Patrick Hume, in 1695* 
Thefe evidences of encreafmg celebrity, within thirty 

r Sec the Commendatory Verfes on Milton in the prefent 
edition of his Poetical Works. 

8 Dr. Johnfon has faid, that Dryden's Virgil was the firft con- 
fid erable work publiihed by fubfeription. But this edition of 
Paradife Loji preceded the Englifli Virgil fome years. Mace's 
J\Iufick's Monument, fo\. 1 6*76, was publiihed by fubfeription. Per- 
haps Minfheu's Guide into Tongues, fol. 1617, may be confidered 
as the firft book, of which the fale was promoted by this method. 

x William -Wollafton, author of the Religion of Nature deli- 
neated : the poem he endeavoured to fupprefs. See Biog. Brit.. 
Art. Wottqfion 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON, lis 

years after the firft appearance of the poem, I 
thought too remarkable to overpafs ; efpecially as the 
popularity of Paradife Loft has been fuppofed to 
be very confined, till the appearance of Addifon's 
criticifm. 

Such were the proofs, relating to this fubjec\ which 
I had difcovered when I firft publilhed this account 
of Milton. I have fince found more. Nor may the 
production of them be thought unnecefiary, as the 
unpopularity of Milton in the feventeenth century is yet 
believed. A very ingenious u author has lately afferted, 
that Cowley and Cleveland were «nore popular than 
Milton. The affertion has been queftioned in an acute 
criticifm, of which the foundation is juft; as the facts 
already ltated, and thole which I {hall add, evince. 
Nor will Mr. Southey regard, without pleafure, the 
evidences that Paradife Loft could be well appre- 
ciated even under the Stuarts. " The x affertion 
that Cowley was more popular in his day than Milton, 
we do not believe, in the more refpectable fenfe of 
the word. If popularity mean the opinion of women 
and children, or the lower clafs of readers, the novels 
of the circulating library are at this day more popular 
than Paradife Loft. But, among good judges, Milton 
was early and claffically worshipped. He was early 
tranflated into foreign languages, — which Cowley, 
we believe, never was. At all events, the popularity 
of Cowley is to be regarded as an exception to the 
rule — that demerit will not be overrated in its own 

u Mr. Southey, in the Preface to his Specimens of the later 
Engliih Poets, p. xxvii. 

x Edinburgh Review, N° xxi. p. 52. 

vol, i. I 



114 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

day,— than a confirmation of the contrary. Cleveland 
was never fo popular as Milton, in his own day, of 
in any other. The mppoied neglect of Milton among 
his contemporaries has been greatly exaggerated. 
Neither the iilence of Dryden, nor the political ma- 
lignity of Winftanly, prove that the feventeenth cen- 
tury was not deeply fenfible of his excellence, any 
more than Voltaire's laughing at Paradife Loft proves 
his being contemned by the moderns." To illuftrate 
what is here advanced, I mention firft that an exami- 
nation of Milton's blank verfe, and a proper tribute 
to the fweetnefs of his language in the Paradife Loft, 
occur in Dr. Woodford's y Paraphrafe upon the Can- 
ticles, publiihed in 1679- Next, in the poetical 
tranllation of Jacob Catiius's Self-Confict, publiihed 
in 1680, the anonymous tranflator obferves, in the 
Preface, that " it were a pity gold mould be rejected, 
becaufe prefented unto thee in a homely veflel ; or 
foveraign counfel, becaufe not fung to thee by a 
Cowley, or a Milton ; the very footfteps of either of 
which thou art not likely here to find." But, not* 
withftanding this modeft depreciation of his labour, 
the tranflator has employed, with good effect, many 
Miltonick expreflions. We find Milton again the 
admired theme of an unknown author in 1683, who,- 
in his work entitled The Situation of Paradife found 
out, cites with tafte and judgement feveral paflages 
from the fourth book of Paradife Loft ; and, by the 
application of a remark in S. Athanafius, confirms 
the 7 - opinion that Milton, in his defcription of Para- 

y See ulfo vol. ii. of the prcfent edition of Milton's Poetical 
Works, pp. 277, 278. 

* See my Note on rar.'Lq/l, B. iv. 256\ 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. j\5 

dife, confulted the Fathers. " a As to the eafterly 
fituation of this garden," lays the author, " S. Atha- 
nafius has a fancy thereupon extraordinary poetical, 
and which I take to be more expreffive of its riches, 
and its pleafures, than thofe defcriptions the moft 
fanciful poets can give of their Elyfmm ; viz. • That 
from hence about the Oriental parts of India there 
are every where fuch fragrant fcents, and that the 
fpices receive their odours, as if blown from that 
happy place :' Which is good poetry enough, though 
too light for him : And Milton has it, 

— - — ■ ( Now gentle gales, 

' Fanning their odoriferous wings difpenfe 

f Native perfumes, and whifper whence they Hole 

< Thofe balmy fpoils.' " 

From the happy illuftration of this beautiful pafTage 3 
I proceed to notice a b tranflation of the firft book of 
Paradife Loft fo early as in 1685 ; and I will clofe 
the publick expremons of regard and refpeCl for 
Milton, under the Stuarts, with a citation from Poems 
to the Memory of Edmond Waller, Efq. By fever al 
hands, in 1688, where Milton obtains, from an 
anonymous writer, this commendation by comparifon : 

Now^ in foft notes, like dying fwans, he'd fmg, 
Now tower aloft, like eagles on the wing ; 
Speak of adventurous deeds in fuch a ftrain, 
As all but Milton would attempt in vain ; 
And only there, where his rapt Mufe does tell 
How in th' aetherial war th* Apoftate Angels fell. 

Of the anecdote, related by Richardfon, refpe&ing 
the celebrity which Paradife Loft has been fuppofed 

* Pages, 23, 24. 

1 See the lift of Tranflations, at the end of this Account. 
I 2 



116 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

to owe to Denham, the accurate inveitigation of Mr, 
Malone has detected the improbability. 

n e The elder Richardfon," fays this acute and learned 
writer, <( fpeaking of the tardy reputation of Paradife Loft, 
tells us, (and the tale has been repeated in various Lives of 
Milton,) that he was informed by Sir George Hungerford, an 
ancient member of parliament, many years previous to 1734,) 
that Sir John Denham came into the Houfe one morning 
with a meet of Paradife Loft wet from the prefs, in his 
hand ; and, being aiked what it was, he replied, * Part of 
the nobleft poem that ever was written in any language or 
in any age.' However, the book remained unknown till 
it was produced about two years afterwards by Lord Buck- 
hurft on the following occafion. That nobleman, in com- 
pany with Mr. Fleetwood Shephard, (who frequently told 
the ftory to Dr. Tancred Robinfon, an eminent phyfician, 
and Mr. Richardfon's informer,) looking over fome books in 
Little Britain, met with Paradife Loft ; and, being fur- 
prifed with fome pafTages in turning it over, bought it. The 
bookftller requefled Lis Lordfhip to fpeak in its favour, if 
he liked it : for the impreflion lay on his hands as wafte 
paper. Lord Buckhurft, (whom Richardfon inaccurately 
calls the Earl of Dorfet; for he did not fucceed to that title 
till fome years afterwards,) having read the poem, fent it to 
Dryden, who in a fhort time returned it with this anfwer : 
f This man cuts us all out, and the ancients too! — Much 
the fame character (adds Mr. Richardfon) he gave of it to a 
north-country gentleman, to whom I mentioned the book, 
he being a great reader, but not in a right train, coming to 
town feldom, and keeping little company. Dryden amazed 
him with fpeaking loftily of it. f Why, Mr. Dryden, fays 
he, ("Sir W. L. told me the thing himfelf,) 'tis not in rhyme/ 
' No; (replied Dryden,) nor would I have done my Virgil 
in rhyme, if I was to begin it again- — How Sir John 
Denham fhould get into his hands one of the meets of Pa- 

c Life of Dryden, 1800, vol. i. part i. p. 112, &c. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 117 

rudife Loft, while it was working off at the prefs, it is not 
very eafy to conceive. The proof-fheets of every book, as. 
well as the finifhed fheets when worked off, previous to pub- 
lication, are fubjeft to the inflection of no peribn but the 
author, or the perfons to whom he may confide them ; and 
there is no evidence or probability that any intimacy fub- 
fifted between Sir John Denham and Milton. Here then is 
the firft difficulty. The next is, that during a great part of 
the year 1667, when Milton's poem probably was palling 
through the prefs, the knight was difordered in his under- 
ftanding : But a ftronger objection remains behind ; for, on 
examination, it will be found that Denham, who is raid to 
have thus blazoned Paradife Loft in the Houfe of Commons, 
was never in parliament. Let us, however, wave this objec- 
tion, and fuppofe this eulogy to have been pronounced in a 
full Houfe of Commons in 1667, in which year Milton's 
great poem according to fome of the title-pages firft appeared, 
whilft others have the dates of 1668 and 166,9. So little 
effe6l had Denham's commendation, that we find in two 
years afterzcards almoft the whole impreffion lying on the 
bookfeller's hands as wafte-paper: during which time Dryden, 
a poet himfelf, living among poets, and perfonally acquainted 
with Milton, had never feen it ! And to crown all, by the 
original contract between Milton and Simmons, the printer, 
dated April 27, 1667, it was ftipulated, that, whenever 
thirteen hundred books were fold, he ihould receive five 
pounds, in addition to the fum originally paid on the fale of 
the copy : and this fecond fum of five pounds was paid to 
him, as appears from the receipt, on the 26th of April, 
1669 : fo that, in two years after the original publication, 
we find that, inftead of almoft the whole impreffion then 
lying on the bookfeller's hands, thirteen hundred put of 
fifteen hundred copies of this poem had been difperfed. 
Unlefs, therefore, almoft every fpecies of incongruity and 
contradiction can authenticate a narrative, this anecdote mult 
be rejected as wholly unworthy of credit." 



118 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Before I quit the fubjecl; of the firft appearance 
of Paradife Loft, I muft notice a communication, 
made to the publick d not long fince by a gentleman 
poffeffing the original edition, of the following lines ; 
apparently written by a female on two leaves pre- 
fixed to the title-page of his copy, and fubfcribed 
at the bottom with this fingular remark : " Dictated 
by J. M." The communicator obferves, that the 
daughter of Milton officiated as his amanuenfis ; and 
that, from the remark already mentioned, there is 
fome reafon to attribute the lines to the author of 
Paradife Loft. Different female hands, it may be 
added, appear in the manufcript of Milton, pre- 
fer ved in Trinity College, Cambridge. However, 
the bondage of rhyme will probably incline fome 
readers ' to doubt the authenticity of thefe lines ; 
while feveral ftriking fentiments and expreffions, and 
the frequent flow of the verfcs into each other, may 
perhaps occafion fome alfo to think them genuine, 
and that the great poet might have chofen, as an 
amufement, to employ once more the " jingling 
found of like endings." The fubjecl: alfo had been 
a favourite theme of Milton. On Day -Break. 

" Welcome, bright chorifter, to our hemifphere ; 
u Thy glad approaches tell us Day is near. 
f< See ! how his early dawn creeps o'er yon hill, 
" And with his grey-ey'd light begins to fill 
" The filent air, driving far from our fight 
i( The (tarry regiment of frighted Night ; 
99 Whofe pale-fac'd regent, Cynthia, paler grows, 
" To fee herfelf purfu'd by conquering foes ; 

d In the Gentleman's Magazine for Auguft ]7S6, p. 69s, 



;** 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 119 

¥. Yet daring ftays behind, to guard the rear 

f< Of her black armies whither without fear 

*' They may retreat, till her alternate courfe 

f( Bring her about again with rallied force. 

f{ Hark ! how the lion's terrour loud proclaims 

•*' The gladfome tidings of day's gentle beams, 

" And, long-kept iilence breaking, rudely wakes 

" The feather'd train, which foon their concert makes, 

■ ( And with unmeafur'd notes, unnumber'd lays, 

ft Do joyfully falute the lightfome rays. 

" But hearken yonder, where the louder voice 

" Of fome keen hunter's horn hath once or twice 

" Recheated out its blaft, which feems to drill 

tc Th' opposing air, and with its echo fill. 

" Thither let's hie ; and fee the toilfome hound, 

" Willing, purfues his labour, till he 'has found 

fC Some hope of what he follows, then with frefht 

u And pleating clamour tells it to the reft. 

" O Thou, who fometimes by moil facred voice 
" Father of Light wert ftyl'd, let my free choice ^~ 
" (Though all my works be evil, feldom right,) 
u Shun loving darknefs rather than the light. 
" Let thy effential brightnefs, with quiek glance, 
" Dart through the foggy mift of ignorance 
(( Into the darken'd intellect, and thence 
" Difpel whatever clouds o'erfpread the fenfe; 
" Till, with e illuminated eyes, the mind 
(i All the dark corners in itfelf can find, 
" And fill them all with radiant light, which may 
" Convert my gloomy night to fun-ihine day. 
" Though dark, O God ! if guarded by thy might 
" I fee with intellectual eyes-, the night 
" To me a noon-tide blaze, illumin'd by 
" The glorious fplendour of thy Majefty !" 

e The printed word is illummd. An acute writer in the 
JBritifh Critic fuggefts that the metre requires illuminated. 



120 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

After the publication of Paradife Loft, Milton 
refumed his defign of giving an hiftory of his native 
country. But he proceeded only as far as the 
Norman conqueft. Of this hiftory the firit printed 
copies were mutilated; for the licenfer expunged 
feveral paiTages, which, reprobating the pride and 
fuperftition of the Monks in the Saxon times, were 
underftood as a concealed fatire upon the Biihops in 
the reign of the fecond Charles. Milton, however, 
bellowed a copy of the unlicenfed paiTages on the 
Earl of Anglefea; which were publifhed in 1681, 
with a preface, declaring that they originally be- 
longed to the third book of his hiftory, and which 
have been lince inlerted in their proper places. The 
fix books, which Milton executed, appeared in 
1670. 

In 1671, he f published the Paradife Regained, 
and Samfon Agoniftes. Of the former poem Phillips 
lias s recorded Milton's opinion ; not his preference 
of it to Paradife Loft, but his h mortification to find 
it cenfured as infinitely inferiour to his former epick 
production. His pretended preference has been l 
recommended by an ingenious writer, with other 

f At the price, bound, of two lhillings and fixpence. ClaveTs 
Catalogue, l6'73. 

8 Lite of Milton, l6'<)4, p. xxxix. 

1 In a manufcript note, at the end of Toland's Life of Milton, 
communicated to me by Mr. F. G. Waklron, it is related that Pa- 
radife Regained was, in the poet's own opinion, the better poem, 
though it could never obtain to be named with Paradife Loft ; 
nnd that Milton gave this reafon for the general diflike, namely, 
That the people had a general f< life of the lofi of Varadifc, but 
.mf nn equal gitjt foi lh< regaining of it. 

1 Letters of Literature, J 785, p. 41 6, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 121 

popular tales believed without vouchers, and with- 
out probability, to fupreme contempt. Uncommon 
energy of thought, and felicity of compofition, as 
Mr. Hayley obferves, are apparent in both the per- 
formances of Milton, however different in defign/ 
-dimenfion, and effect. And Mr. Dunfter, the 
learned editor of Paradife Regained in 1795, has 
happily advanced the poem from the obfcurity, in 
which it had been too long fhrouded ; pleading its 
merits with all the mafterly difcrimination of an 
eloquent advocate. Mr. Warton and Mr. Hayley 
aflert, that the poet planned, or began, it at 
Chalfont: Mr. Dunfter argues, that he probably 
Jini/Jied it at his temporary refidence, 

<c k We may fuppofe," he fays, n that Milton remained at 
Chalfont till towards the Spring of 1666 ; as it is faid he did 
not return to London until { the ficknefs was over, and the 
city was well cleanfed, and become fafely habitable." — 
Ellwood proceeds to inform us, that f when he waited on 
him afterwards in London, which he feldom failed to do when 
his occafions led him thither/ Milton mowed him his fecond 
poem ; and ' in a pleafant tone/ (which to me indicates his 
own full approbation of his work,) laid to him, < This is 
owing to you, for you put it in my head by the queftion l 
you put to me" at Chalfont; which before I had not thought 
of/ It feems therefore nearly certain, that the whole of the 
poem was compofed at Chalfont. As it was conceived with 
fervour, it was, I doubt not, proceeded in e with eager 
thought/ This was the chara&eriftick of Milton in com- 
pofition, as may be collected from his letter to his friend 
Deodate, (September 2, 1637,) where he defcribeshis own 

k Addition to his edit, of Par. Regained, 
1 See the Origin of Paradife Regained, prefixed to the poern 
in the 5th vol. of this edition. 



122 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

temper to be marked with an eagernefs to finifh. whatever 
he had begun ; c meum fie eft ingenium, nulla ut mora, nulla 
quies, nulla ferme illius rei cura, aut cogitatio diftineat, 
quoad pervadam quo feror, et grandem aliquam ltudiorum 
meorum quafi periodum conficiam. , Epi/i. Familiar. \i f 
There is alfo fuch a high degree of unity, connection, and 
integral perfection in the whole of this fecond poem, as me- 
dicates it to have been the uninterrupted work of one 
feafon ; and, as I would fuppofe, the exclujive occupation of 
his divine genius during his refidence in Buckinghamfhire. 
To have compofed the whole of the poem in that time, 
would require him to produce only about ten lines a day ; 
and many parts are given fo perfectly con amore, that 
I am confident, upon thofe occafions, he proceeded 
at a very different rate. That the Paradife Re- 
gained was not publifhed till five years after the time when 
I fuppofe it to have been completed, might be the ground 
on which Mr. Warton confidered it as not being then 
finiflied : and yet many other reafons might be afligned for its 
not being printed fooner. Paradife Loft, we know, was finiflied 
at leaft two years before it was printed ; and it was not till a 
year after Milton's return to London from Chalfont, that the 
contract with Samuel Simmons for the copy of it was 
figncd, and the firft purchafe money of five pounds was paid 
for it. Milton, we find, received the fecond five pounds 
two years after ; the ftipulated number of copies, to entitle 
him thereto, being then fold. The author probably did not 
think of going again to the prefs with his fecond poem, till 
he faw the requifite fale of Xhcfirjl accomplilhed. Paradife 
Regained might alfo wait for the completion of its compa- 
nion, the Samfon ; a work, which furnifties fome internal 
proofs of its having been compofed at different periods. J14 
July, I67O, the two poems were licenfed, and were printed 
the year following. In 1670 was printed his Ylijlory of 
England : fo that Milton was not without his occupations 
between the time of his return to London, in the Spring of 
1666, and his procuring the licence for printing his Pa- 
radife Regained and Samfon Agonijlcs in July 10*70. That 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 123 

he might revife and correft his brief epick previous to this, 
is very poffible : but, that it was compofed in its firft form 
at Chalfont, I think, cannot be doubted. Accordingly I 
regard the little manfion there with no fmall degree of vene- 
ration, as being exclufively the incunabula of Milton's 
Paradife Regamed. I mould approach it as a Tibur or a 
Tufculum ; and mould feel myfelf on claffick ground." 

For m fimilar reafons the poet's laft refidence, the 
houfe in the Artillery-walk, may appear to his en- 
ihufiaftick admirers, as Mr. Hayley remarks, con- 
fecrated by his genius. I proceed to notice the 
poem accompanying Paradife Regained, the Samfon 
Agoriiftes] in which there are fo many fevere 
ftrictures, clearly pointing at the Reftoration, and 
at the fubfequent fufFerings of Milton's party, that 
it has been often wondered it ihould have been 
fan6tioned with an imprimatur. A learned antiquary 
thus endeavours to account for this indulgence in 
the licenler : " n Hurt by the cenfures, to which he 
had fubjec"ted himfelf by his over-refined cavils at 
Paradife Loji, he might be unwilling to renew and 
encreaie the obloquy, by demurring at the appear- 
ance of another poem of unqueftionable excellence." 
To his own fufFerings alio the poet often alludes in 
this fublime and affecting tragedy. He had before 
couched his complaint, as well as his unfubdued 
contempt of regal government, under the concluding 
fentence of his hiftory : " As the long-fufFering of 
God permits bad men to enjoy profperous days with 
the good, fo his feverity ofttimes exempts not good 
men from their Jliare in evil times with the bad" 

m See the Note n to the Nuncupative Will. 

i Denne's Hill, of Lambeth Parifh, &c. 1795, p. 344. 



124 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

In 1672, he publifhed his Art is Logicce plenior 
injlitutio, ad Rami methodum concinnata. He had, 
in 1661, given to the publick, for the fervice of 
youth, Accidence commenced Grammar. Thefe pieces 
are proofs of that zeal for careful education, which 
Milton fhowed throughout his life. To this zeal 
Dr. Johnfon has paid a tribute of applaufe, not more 
honourable than juft. " To that multiplicity of 
attainments, and extent of comprehenfion, that 
entitle this great author to our veneration, may be 
added a kind of humble dignity, which did not dif- 
dain the meaneft fervices to literature. The epick 
poet, the controvertift, the politician, having already 
defcended to accommodate children with a book of 
rudiments, now, in the laft years of his life, com- 
pofed a book of Logick, for the initiation of ftudents 
in philofophy." Of his book of Logick there was a 
fecond edition in the following year. 

In 1673, his Treatife Of true Religion, Herejie, 
Schifm, Toleration, and what bejl means may be ufed 
again/l the growth of Popery, was publiihed. In 
this difcourfe there are fome parages, which fhow 
that Milton had altered his opinion, fince his younger 
days, refpe6ting certain points of doctrine. That 
regard for the Holy Writings, which always predo- 
minated in his mind, is alfo particularly obfervable 
in it. " Let not," he fays, the countryman, the 
tradefman, the lawyer, the phyfician, the ftatefman, 
excufe himfelf by his much buiinefs, from the ftudious 
reading of the Bible." This advice he offers as the 
belt prefervative againft Popery. I lis principle of 
toleration, as Dr. Johnfon obfervcs, is agreement in 
the fuificiency of the Scriptures ; and he extends it 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 125 

to all who, whatever their opinions are, profefs to 
derive them from the Sacred Books. In the fame 
year he reprinted his juvenile poems with fome ad- 
ditions, and with the Tractate on Education. Not- 
withftanding the publick avowal of his oppofition to 
Popery, the infamous Titus Oates had the impu- 
dence to affert, not long afterwards, that " Milton 
was a known ° frequenter of a Popiih Club." 

In 1674, the laft year of his laborious, life, he 
published his Familiar Letters in Latin, to which 
he added fome Academical Exercifes. His employ- 
ment of the prefs clofed for ever in a tranflation of 
the p Latin Declaration of the Poles in favour of 
John the third, their heroick fovereign. He had 
now been a long fufferer by the gout ; and in July, 
confidering his end to be approaching, he informed 
his brother Chriftopher, who was then a bencher in 
the Inner Temple, that he wifhed to dictate to him 
the difpolition of his property. The recent dif- 
covery of this ISIuncupative Will minutely illuftrates 
the domeftick manners of the poet. To this account 
of his life it is fubjoined, entire, with the notes of 
Mr. Warton. Milton died on q Sunday the 8th of 

° Dedication or addrefs prefixed to the true Narrative of the 
Horrid Plot, &c. of the Popifh Party, by T. Oatcs, D. D. fol. 
Lond. 1679. 

p The Biographical Dictionary, of 1798, calls this piece a 
tranflation from the Dutch. See vol. 10. p. 465. But the title- 
page of the performance announces it thus : " Now faithfully 
translated from the Latm Copy." 

* Mr. Hayley fays, on Sunday the 15th of November. But 
it appears, by the Regifter of St. Giles's Cripplegate, that he 
was buried on the 12th. « L. John Melton, gentleman. Con 
fumption. Chancell. 12. Nov. 1674/' Melton has been altered. 



126 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

November following. His death was fo eafy, that 
the time of his expiration was unperceived by the 
attendants in his room. No Mufe's tear was found 
to grace publickly his obfequies. Fifteen years 
afterwards indeed there did appear r " A propitiatory 
facrifice to the ghoft of J. M. by way of Paftoral, 
in a dialogue between Thyrfis and Corydon ;■"' ad- 
drefled by the author " to his dear brother Mr. Aih 
Wyndham." This poem, however, feems to have 
been written (though not publilhed before 1689,) 
foon after the death of Milton. It is of confiderable 
length, and of very unequal execution. There 
are paflages in it, however, with which the reader 
of tafte and feeling may be pleafed ; as with the 
following, where the author, having defcribed the 
poetical abilities of Milton " from his cradle to his 
tomb," thus reprefents the blind bard in 

" his age and fruit together ripe, 

<( Of which blind Homer* nly was the type : 
<c Tirefias like, he mounted up on high, 
« And fcoru'd the filth of dull mortality; 

in frcfher ink, to Milton. L. denotes the liberty of the parifli. 
Mr. Steevens fuppofed the entry to have been made by the under- 
taker, who knew nothing more of Milton than that he was dead. 
Aubrey fays, " He was buried at the upper end in St. Gyles 
Cripplogatc chanccll," and that, " when the two fteppes to the 
Communion Table were rayfed, (Nov. 1621,) his Stone was re- 
moved/' 

r The book, in which this poem occurs, is little known; and 
has been obligingly pointed out to me by the ingenious and 
acute continuator of Jonfon's Sad Shepherd, Mr. F. G. Waldron. 
It is entitled, " Poems and Tranllalions written upon feveral 
OCCafionS, and to feveral perfons. By a late Scholar of Eaton, 
London, l6$9. n Small 8vo. The poem will be found in 
p. 110, &c. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 127 

<f Convers'd with gods, and grac'd their royal line, 
" All ecftafie, all rapture, all divine !" 

Again, deploring his lofs, the poet ably notices 
Milton's rejection of rhyme ; and calls the object of 
his grief, 

" Daphnis, the great reformer of our ifle ! 

" Daphnis, the patron of the Roman ftile ! 

ie Who firft to fence converted doggrel rhimes, 

" The Mufes' bells took off, and ftopt their chimes ; 

" On furer wings, with an immortal flight, 

<c Taught us how to believe, and how to write !" 

Towards the conclufion, is this fpirited prediction 
of Milton's increafing glory : 

<c Even tombs of ftone in time will wear away ; 

a Brafs pyramids are fubject to decay ; 

" But lo ! the poet's fame mall brighter mine 

s< In each fucceeding age, 

ee Laughing at the baffled rage 
f( Of envious enemies and deftructive time." 

Milton left in manufcript, A biief Hiftory of Mofco- 
via, and of other lefs-knoxvn Countries lying ecift- 
ward of Ruffia as far as Cathay, which was printed 
in 1682. His manufcript Syftem of Theology, and 
An Anfwer to a Libel upon himfelf (which Phillips 
fuppofes him to have fuppreffed from a proper con- 
tempt of the libeller,) are fuppofed to have periihed. 
Of the following tract the biographers of Milton 
have taken no notice : " An Argument, or Debate 
in Law, of the great Queftion concerning the 
Militia ; as it is now fettled by Ordinance of both the 
Houfes of Parliament. By J. M. London, 1642." 
4°. On the title page of this pamphlet, (now in 
the poiTelTion of the Marquis of Stafford,) Milton's 



128 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

elder Brother in Comus, the fecond Earl of Bridge- 
water, had written the name of the poet as the 
author. At the end of Phillips's Life of Milton, 
with manufcript remarks by Oldys, communicated 
to me by Mr, Reed, this tracl; was alio noticed among 
Oldys's additions to the publications of Milton. The 
fame remark is made in a s volume of Tracts, be- 
longing to the Archiepifcopal Library at Lambeth 
Palace, with additions apparently from a contempo- 
rary writer ; additions, indeed, not exhibiting genuine 
claims to credit, yet curious and amufmg ; and in the 
following order. 

1. John Milton's Speech for unlicenfd Printing. 

2. his Salve for y e Blind, a def: qfy e ParlamK 

3. his Argument concerning y e Militia. 

5. his Jus Populi. 

6. ElxwoxXccrns, his Anfwer to y c Kings Book. 

7. his Tenure of Kings. 

4. The Parlam ts . Petition cone: y* Militia, & y c 
Kings Anfw r . 

The numbers 5, 6, - and 7, have been altered by 
the writer of the preceding contents, as he had 
omitted to put number 4 in its proper place. And 
5 appears to have firft ftood without his before Jus ; 
but is added evidently by the fame hand. After the 
Jus Populi were alfo the following words, by fome 
fuppofed to be his; but thefe words are crofted 
through with the pen, and his prefixed, as I have 
before ftated. The initials J. M. Efquise are printed 
in the title-pa^c of the fecond of- thefe tracls, and 
the remarker has written under them J". Milton ; as 

9 In quarto, numbered I. 5. 23. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 129 

he has alio placed in the title-page of the fifth, 
\vhich exhibits no name or initials, the letters J. M. 
But however careful and earneft this remarker has 
been, I am convinced he is miftaken, in attributing 
thefe two pamphlets to Miltori. They exhibit indeed 
(particularly the latter) many energetick fentiments 
and expreffions. The former, printed in 1643, 
opens with this pithy avowal to the Reader : " It is 
hot rhetorick but reafon can fatisfie the judgment. 
The former may cozen the confcience, and dazle 
fimple men : the latter onely can fatisfie the wife, and 
lead to truth. A rough diamond is precious, when 
the beft wrought glafs is defpicable: the painted 
moratory which beft pleafeth the vulgar, ill fuits with 
the well-becoming gravity of a ftatift." But, very 
foon afterwards, the author tells us that the unhappy 
ftate of things " hath inforc'd a pen et)er before ft ill 
to expofe itfelfe to publike eenfufe." The author 
therefore was not Milton. In the latter of thefe 
Tracts, publimed in 1644, there is a paflage fo mi* 
nutely concurring with Milton's obfervations on the 
fame fubjecl;, as might almoft lead the reader to 
admit the juftice of the remarkets defignation. 
** * The nature cf Man being depraved by the fall 

* Jus Populi, pp. 42, 43. Compare Milton's reflexion on 
the political union of the fallen Angeis, Par. Lq/?, B* ii. 4#& 

" O fhame to Men ! Devil with Devil damn'd 
" Firm concord holds;, Men only difagree 
** Of creatures rational, though under hope 
" Of heavenly grace : and, God proclaiming peace, 
" Yet live in hatred, enmity, and ftrifc, 
u Among themfelves, and levy cruel wars, 
u Wafting the earth, each other to deftroy ; 
VOL. I. K 



130 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

of Adam, miferies of all forts broke in upon us in 
throngs, together with fin; infomuch that no-crea* 
ture is now fo uncivill and untame, or fo unfit either 
to live with or without focietie, as Man. Wolves and 
beares can better live without wolves and beares* 
than Man can without Man ; yet neither are wolves 
nor beares fo fell, fo hoftile, and fo deftruclive to 
their own kinde, as Man is to his. In fome refpects, 
Man is more eftranged from political! union than 
Devils are : for by reafon of naturall difparitie, the 
reprobate Angels continue without diflblution of 
order, and iliun that confufion amongft themfelves 
which they endeavour to promote amongft Men. 
But amongft Men, nothing but curled enmitie is to 
be feen." However, in a preceding page, the 
iavourite topick of Milton's literary employment in 
•1644 is mentioned in fuch a manner as at once 
•deftroys the poffibility of his having written the 
treatife. The author is fpeaking of divorce and 
repudiation : " u And that," he fays, " feemes dif- 
countenanced by our Saviour, except in cafe of 
Adultery." This was not the doctrine of Milton. 

There is in the Library of Trinity College Dublin 
a volume of Milton's pamphlets, in the * underwritten 

" As if (which might induce us to accord) 

" Man had not hdli/h foes enow befides, 

". That, day and night, for his deftruciion wa.it." 

n Jus Populi, p. 31. 

* 1. Of Reformation touching Church Discipline, &c. 

2. Of Prelirticall Epifcopacy. 

3. The Reafon of Church Government, &c. .. 

4. Animadvcrfions upon the Rcmonftrants Defence, &c« 

5. An Apology againit a Pamphlet, (Sec. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 131 

order, which he had prefented to the learned 
Patrick Young, Charles the firft's librarian ; to 
whom he has prefixed a brief addrefs concluding 
with an expreffion iimilar to that in Paradife Loft> 
of y finding fit audience, though few; — " z panels 
hujiifmodi le&oribiis contentusT Whether Milton's 
avowal of content with a few readers, fuch as Young, 
may be thought to favour Mr. a Warton's opinion 
that the profe-works of Milton were never popular, 
I leave to the reader's decifion. But I do not con- 
ceive that thefe profe-works experienced fo much con- 
temporary neglect, as we have hitherto been led to 
believe. I find the diction, by which they are dif- 
tinguilned, thus concifely but ftrongly commended 
in 1650 : " b In truth it is very hard to write good 
Englifh : and few have attained its height, in this 
laft frie of books, but Mr. Milton." 

To thefe anecdotes of Milton's Profe-works, I may 
be permitted to fubjoin the opinion which, generally 

6. The Doctrine and Difcipline of Divorce. 

7. The Judgement of Martin Bucer. 

8. Colafterion. 

9. Tetrachordon. 
10. Areopagitica. 

y Par. Loft, B. vii. 31. 

z The addrefs is written on the margin of the firft title-page 
in the volume, part of which has been cut off in the binding, 
Mr. Cooper Walker who communicated to me the notice of 
this curiolity, informs me alfo that, at the top of the page, is 
written the name of a former pofleflbur, Matt. Pilkington, 
Stamford, 1693. 

a In his concluding note on Milton's Ode to Roufe. 

b An Introduction to the Teutonick Philofophie, &c. By C. 
Hotham, Fellow of. Peter Houfe, Englifhed by D. F. 12mc. 
1650. Preface. 

K 2 



WZ SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

fpeaking, I entertain of them. Mr. Warton c has 
treated the profe of Milton, both Englifh and Latin, 
with almoit unrelenting feverity ; conceding only to 
the Tractate on Education and the Areopagitica the 
meed of commendation. 

To fuch decifions I cannot fubfcribe. At the fame 
time I reproach not the dillike, and deprecate only 
the acrimonious oppofition, of others, to my own 
opinion; perfuaded, however, that I fliall not want 
the fupport of numbers, when I alTert that there 
are various pafTages in Milton's profe, beiides the 
Tractate on Education and the Areopagitica, which 
fcem entitled to the praife of the molt impreffive 
eloquence ; and that, in his Latin performances, 
there are abundant examples of pure as well as 
animated ftyle. The accurate fcholar rarely ceafes 
indeed to be viiible either in the politician, in the con- 
troverfialift, or in the fecretary. Perhaps his Englifli 
ftyle is, in general, too learned. It is obferved by 
an acute critick, that, " d if we allow to Hooker 
and Milton occafional majefty and ftrength, and 
fometimes a peculiar felicity of expreffiqn, it mult 
yet be admitted, that, though uling pure Englifh 
words, the elaboration and inverfion of their periods 
are fuch as to create, in the mere Englifh reader, no 
finall difficulty in the comprehenfion of their mean- 
ing ; a fault furely of the moft ferious nature, and 
ever productive of averfion and fatigue." Of his 
Hi/lory of England Warburton has laid, that " it 
is written with great fnnplicity, contrary to his cuftom 

c In his note, ut fupra. 

4 Drake's Effays, &c. of Englifh Stylo, vol. ii. p. 39. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 155 

in his profe-works ; and is the better for it. But he 
fometimes rifes to a furprifing grandeur in the fen- 
timent and expreflion, as at the conclufion of the 
fecond book, Henceforth we are to jlcer, &c. I 
never faw any thing equal to this, but the conclu- 
fion of Sir Walter Raleigh's Hiftory of the World." 
That Milton may be found virulent in thefe civil and 
religious fpeculations, will not, perhaps, be denied : 
His pen, dipped as it fometimes is, in the gall of 
puritanifm, hurries him into the violence of rage ; 
and he then condemns without mercy, as he judges 
without candour. But, at other times, his pages 
breathe the fweeteft language of feniibility; the 
abufive fpirit, which the turbulence of the times excited, 
finks into calmnefs ; and, without fubfcribing to his 
political fentiments, we are led to admire the uncom- 
mon felicity of his expreflion* 

The hand of Milton may be often difcovered in 
the publication of his nephew, Edward Phillips, 
entitled " Theatrum Poet arum Anglicanorum> or A 
compleat Collection of the Poets, efpecially the moft 
eminent, of all ages, &c. * Lond, 1675." Among 
many criticifms in this volume, which muft be at- 
tributed to Milton, thofe on Shakfpeare and Marlow 
are eminently confpicuous. " f Such criticifms," 
Mi*. Warton remarks, c< were not common after the 

« Kennet, in his Regifter, mentions this work as published 
jn l660, p. 321. See alfo Dr. Farmer's Catalogue, p. 178, 
where a copy of this date alfo occurs. But the Imprimatur for 
Phillips's work is dated Sep. 14. 1674* And therefore the date 
of 1660 cannot belong to this book. 

tfift. of Eng, Poetry, vol, iii, p, 44V. 



134 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

national tafte had been juft corrupted by the falfe 
and capricious refinements of the Court of Charles 
the fecond." Wood alfo relates, that Phillips's 
" Enchiridion Linguae Latinas," and " Speculum 
Linguas Latinae," both publiihed in 1684, were g 
all or moftly taken from the Latin Thefaurus written 
by Milton. The Satyr agauift Hypocrites, a coarfe 
but ftriking picture of the times, of which there 
have been leveral impreffions, was alfo attributed 
to Milton, and once was advertiled for fale as his 
production. But his nephew Edward undeceived 
the world; not fuffering the leaves of this fuppofi- 
titious laurel to be torn from the brow of his brother 
John. •" h John Phillips, the maternal nephew and 
difciple of an author of moft deferved fame, late 
deceas't, being the exacteft of heroic poets, (if the 
truth were well examined, and it is the opinion of 
many both learned and judicious perfons,) either of 
the ancients or moderns, either of our own or what- 
ever nation elfe ; from whofe education as he hath 
receiv'd a judicious command of ftyle both in profe 
and verfe, fo from his own natural ingenuity he hath 
his vein of burlefque and facetious poetry, which 
product the Satyr againjl Hypocrites, &c." Nor 
may it be denied, that both Edward and John 
Phillips are the authors of various publications; 
although Dr. Johnfon has haftily alferted the brief 
hiftory of poetry to have been the i only product of 

8 Ath. Ox. vol. ii. p. 1118. 

h Theatrum Poet, l675. Modern Poets, pp. 114, 115. 

1 I have been favoured by John Nichols Efq. with an Epitaph 
" On the excellently learned John Milton," as it appeared iiy 
The Daily Gazetteer of Oct. 30, 1738, faid to be written by 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 135 

Milton's academy. I may defend the great critick 
from the cenfure, however, to which fome k writers 
have pronounced him fubjecl;, of having affirmed 
the hiftory to be written in Latin, which is, with a 
Latin title, written in Englifh. For Wood informs 
us, that Phillips is the author of l another work 
fimilar to the Theatrum Poet arum already men- 
tioned, and written in the language which Dr. 
Johnfon has related. As Johnfon gives no fpecifick 
reference to either work, it is more candid to believe 
him right, than to proclaim him wrong. 

In the title-page to " Poems on Affairs of State 
from the time of Oliver Cromwell, to the Abdication 
of K. James the fecond, written by the greateft wits 
of the Age," and publifhed in 1697, the name of 

an eminent author and one of Milton's pupils. This pupil, how- 
ever, appears to have caught none of the Miltonick tafte or 
fpirit ; his verfes being miferably tame and profaick. 

k The annotator on the Lives of the Poets, edit. 1794, and 
^lr. Hayley. See alfo the Gentleman's Magazine, 1789, p. 416. 

1 Entitled " Traclatulus de carmine dramatico poetarum, prae- 
fertim in choris tragicis, et veteris Comcedias. 

" Compendiofa enumeratio poetarum (faltem quorum fama 
maxime enituit) qui a tempore Dantis Aligerii ufque ad hanc 
astatem claruerunt; nempe Italorum, Germanorum, Anglorum, 
&c." Thefe two things, Wood informs us, " were added to the 
feventeenth edition of Jo h . Buchlerus his book, entit. Sacrarum 
prof anarum que phrajium poeticarum Thefaurus, fyc. 1669." Ath. 
Ox. ut fupr. See a lift of the two Phillips's publications, ibid, 
and p. 1119. To which, perhaps, may be added a copy of 
verfes Upon the incomparable poems of Mr, William Drummoni, after- 
wards prefixed to the works of that elegant author printed at 
Edinburgh in 1711, and ligned Edw. Phillips, Phillips, in his 
Theatrum Poetarum, feems much interefted in behalf of Drum- 
inond, and expreffes his forrow that in his time this charming 
poet faould be fo. little noticed. 



136 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

Milton appears. But of Milton not a fingle line 
■will be found in this collection. The Index indeed 
mentions " Directions to a Painter, (concerning the 
Dutch War,) faid to be written by Sir John Den- 
ham, but believed to be written by Mr. Milton, 
p. 24." But, when we turn to the page, we find the 
poem, worthy only the low eft poetafter, afcribed 
limply, but doubtlefs as unjuftly, to Denham. Fenton, 
the editor of Paradlfe Loft in 1 725, has printed in 
a Mifcellany which he publiihed, called The Oxford 
Mifcellany and Cambridge Poems, a loofe epigram 
under the name of Milton, which had long before 
appeared among the poems of Lord Rochefter. On 
(lender grounds Peck has attributed to Milton the 
tranflation of Buchanan's Baptiftes, which appeared 
in 1641, with the following title: " Tyrannical Go- 
vernment anatomized, or, A Difcourfe concerning 
evil Counfelors : being the Life and Death of John 
the Baptift, and prefented to the King's moft excel- 
lent Majefty, by the author." Aubrey and Wood, 
from different motives, would not have forborne to 
notice fo remarkable a production, if it had proceeded 
from the pen of Milton. This tranflation has been 
m fuppofed, with great probability, to have been in- 
tended as a hint, to Charles the firft, of the danger 
he then incurred from the counfels of feme about 
him : and the hiftory of the Baptift, who loft his head 
by the inftigation of Herodias, feems figuratively to 
glance at the death of Lord Strafford, and at the 
influence of the Queen. Peck might have noticed & 

w Biographia Dramatica, vol. ii. p. 387. 



AND WRITINGS GF MILTON, 137 

political pamphlet, n publifhed in the following year, 
V by J. M:" of which the royal counfellors are the 
principal theme. From numerous examples I will 
cite one : " It is the King's crown that is aimed at, 
and not onely lb, but even the very dethroning of 
him, and his whole pofterity ; and in truth lb it is, 
but by his Mqjejiies evill Councellors ; who, to mag- 
nifie themfelves, intend the ruin of the Common- 
wealth : And is not that in effect a dethroning of his 
Majefty ? All that I mall fay is but this : No Govern- 
ment more bleft or happie, if not abufed by the advice 
of vile mid malignant Cowifellours, p. 3." From the 
following paffage fome readers may fufpec"t J. M., the 
author of this pamphlet, to be Milton : " Freedome, 
as it is a great mercy, io it ought of temporal blef- 
iuigs, next to our lives, to receive the greateft efti- 
mate ; the flavery of the body is the ufher to the 
thraldome of confcience ; and if we foolifhly furrender 
up this, the other will not be long after! p. 12." 
But, in p. 20, there is fufficient proof, that Milton 
could not have written it : " What have we to do 
with Ariitocracy, or Democracy ? God be bleffed, 
we nor know, nor defire, any other government than 
that of Monarchy /" Peck, therefore, if he had feen 
this pamphlet, found that, notwithstanding it harmo- 
nized in a confiderable degree with the fubjecl; of the 
poetical tranflation, it could not be rendered fubfer- 
vient to his hypothecs. Milton, in the account he 
gives of himfelf, appears indeed to have been no 

n Entitled, " A Reply to the Anfwer (printed by his Ma- 
jeiljes command at Oxford) to a printed Booke intituled ' Qb« I 
iervations upon fome of his Majefties late Anfwers and Express/ 
£y J. M* London, printed for M, Walbancke, 1642." 4°. 



138 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

friend to tranflations : " I nerer could delight in long 
citations, much lefs in whole traductions; whether 
it be natural difpofition or education in me, or that 
my mother bore me a fpeaker of what God made 
mine own, and not a tranflator °." He is faid to 
have declined tranflating Homer. 

Of literary affiftance, afforded by Milton to lite^ 
rary friends, we have no anecdotes. I conjecture, 
however, that the younger Lawrence, to whom he 
has addreiTed an excellent Sonnet, had at leaft pro- 
fited by his difcourfe ; for Lawrence has given to the 
world a treatife on a fubjecl, of which Milton was 
particularly fond : " Of our Communion and Warre 
with Angels. Printed in 1646." The Sonnet re- 
cords their friendly vifits. Lawrence lived in the 
neighbourhood of Horton. To Lawrence, as to 
Milton, the " p Tufcan long" feems to have been a 
principal delight. We may reafonably then fuppofe, 
that they fometimes converfed upon the remarkable 
effufions of the q Tufcan mufe, (among other autho- 
rities,) on the guardianfhip of Angels ; that Milton 
perhaps acknowledged the hints he had derived from 
his beloved poetry; and that the converfatiori erf- 
couraged Lawrence in his defign. 

• Profe-Works, vol. i. p. 407, cd. l6"98. 

P Sec the Sonnet, ver. 12, and the note on the Sonnet: 

* The Addrefies of the Italian Mufe All' Angelo Cvjlode are 
frequent. See " Rime del M. A. M. Negrifoli, Vineg. 1552," 
p. 129, and " Sonetti di Diverfi Accadcmici Sanefi, Sien. l608," 
pp. 136, 200, 239, &c. I might alfo add the frequent intro- 
duction of a Spirit or Angel as the annunziatore to the early 
Italian dramas. See Milton's Vcrfes addreffcd to Leonora 
Baroni, his prologue to Camus, and the fame poem throughout* 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 139 

The remains of Milton were attended to the grave 
by " r all his learned and great friends in London, 
not without a friendly concourfe of the vulgar." He 
was buried next his father in the chancel of St. Giles, 
Gripplegate. In Auguft, 1790, the fpot, where his 
body had been depofited, was opened; and a corpfe, 
haftily fuppofed to be his, was expofed to publick 
view. A Narrative of the difmterment of the coffin, 
and of the treatment of the corpfe, was publifhed by 
Philip Neve, Efq. The Narrative was immediately 
and ably anfwered in the St. James's Chronicle, in 
Nine Reafons why it is improbable that the coffin, 
lately dug up in the Pariih Church of St. Giles, 
Cripplegate, mould contain the reliques of Milton. 
Mr. Neve added a Poftfcript to his Narrative. But 
all his labour appears to have been employed in an 
imaginary caufe. The late Mr. Steevens, who par- 
ticularly lamented the indignity which the nominal 
allies of the poet fuftained, has intimated in his 9 ma~ 
nufcript remarks .on this Narrative and Poftfcript, 
that the difinterred corpfe was fuppofed to be that of 
a female, and that the minuteft examination of the 
fragments could not difprove, if it did not confirm, 
the fuppofition. Mr. Lofft, noticing the burial of 
the poet in St. Giles's church, has eloquently cen- 
fured " * the fordid mifchief committed in it, and 

* Toland's Life of Milton, prefixed to the edition of Milton'* 
Profe-works, printed (not at Amfterdam as afierted in the title- 
page,) but at London, in 16^8, fol. p. 4o\ 

8 Now in the poffefiion of James Bindley, Efq; by whom I 
have been favoured with the perufal of them. 

* Preface to his edition of the firft book of Paradife Loft, 
1792, p. xxx. 



HO SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

the market made of the eagernefs with which curiofity 
or admiration prompted perfons to poffefs them lei ves 
of his fuppofed remains, which, however, there is 
reafon to believe, far from being. Milton's, were the 
bones of a perfon not of the fame age or fex. It 
were to be wifhed that neither mperftition, affecta- 
tion, idle curiofity, or avarice, were fo frequently in- 
vading the filence of the grave. Far from honouring 
the illuftrious dead, it is rather outraging the com- 
mon condition of humanity, and laft melancholy ftate 
in which our prefent exiitence terminates. Duit and 
aihes have no intelligence to give, whether beauty, 
genius, or virtue, informed the animated clay. A 
tooth of Homer or Milton will not be diftinguiihed 
from one of a common mortal ; nor a bone of Alex- 
ander acquaint us with more of his character than 
one of Bucephalus. Though the dead be uncon- 
cerned, the living are neither benefited nor improved : 
decency is violated, and a kind of inftin&ive fynv 
pathy infringed, which, though it ought not to over- 
power reafon, ought not without it, and to no pur- 
pofe, to be fuperfeded. But whether the remains of 
that body which once was Milton's, or thofe of any 
other perfon were thus expofed and fet to fale, death 
and diffolution have had their empire over thefe. 
The fpirit of his immortal works furvives invulnerable, 
and muft furvive. Thefe are his beft image, thefe 
the reliques which a rational admiration may cheriib 
and revere P 

It has been obferved that the original ftone, laid 
on the grave of Milton, was u removed not mai)^ 

Sec before, note 9 p. 125, 126. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 141 

years after his interment. Nor were his remains 
honoured by any other memorial in Cripplegate 
church, till the year 1793 ; when, by the munificence 
of the late Mr. Whitbread, an animated marble buft, 
the fculpture of Bacon, under which is a plain tablet, 
recording the dates of the poet's birth and death, 
and of his father's deceafe, was erected in the middle 
aiile. To the Author of Paradife Loji a fimilar 
tribute of refpecl had been paid, in 1737, by Mr. 
Benfon ; who procured his buft to be admitted, where 
once his name had been deemed a profanation, into 
Weftminiter Abbey. And the reception of the mo- 
nument into this venerable edifice became immedi- 
ately the theme of the mufes x . 

Milton, in his youth, is laid to have been ex- 
tremely Y handfome. He was called the Ladv of his 

x By the fpirited lines of Dr. George, which are referred to, at 
the clofeof vol. 7> and which have been alfo afcribed, as I have 
been informed, to the Hon. Thomas Townlhend, father of the 
late Lord Sidney : and by the elegant verfes of Vincent Bourne, 
noticed in the fame volume, which were fuppofed to be written 
by Mr. Keith, but which will be found in the edition of Bourne's 
Poems printed in 1772, though in an earlier edition which I 
have feen, I do not meet with them. 

y The firft publifhed portrait of Milton was that by Marihall, 
prefixed to the edition of the juvenile poems in 1645. With the 
palpable diffimilitude of this portrait Milton was juitlydifpleafed. 
See the Note In Effigiei Sculptorem, vol. vii. p. 303. In the year 
1670, there was another plate, by Faithorne, from a drawing in 
crayons by Faithorne, prefixed to his Hiflory of Britain, with 
this legend ; " Gul. Faithorne a4 vivum delin.et fculpfit. Joannis 
Miltoni effigies, ^Etat. 62. l6j0" It is alfo prefixed to the 
edition of his Profe Works in I69S. It has been obferved, that 
this engraving is not in Faithorne'§ beft manner. The print ha* 



142 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

College ; an appellation which Mr. Hayley fays he- 
been feveral times copied. By an ingenious young artift a new 
drawing was taken from Faithorne's picture, (fuppofed to be 
the bed likenefs extant of the poet, and for which he fat at the 
age of fixty-two,) by the kind permiffion of William Baker, Efq. 
in whofe pofiefTion it now is ; from which an engraving was made 
for my firll edition of Milton's poetical works. From the fame 
picture the neat engraving in the prefent edition is alfo made. 
Faithorne's print is copied by W. Dolle, before Milton's Logick, 
l6'72. Dolle's print is likewife prefixed to the fecond edition 
of Paradife Loft. Faithorne was alfo copied afterwards by 
Robert White, and next by Vertue. Mr. Warton has given 
many other particulars of paintings and engravings of Milton. 

" There are four or five original pictures of our author. The 
firft, a half length with a laced ruff, is by Cornelius Janfen, in 
l6l 8, when he was only a boy of ten years old. It had belonged 
to Milton's widow, his third wife, who lived in Chefhire. This 
was in the pofTeffion of Mr. Thomas Hollis, having been pur- 
chafed at Mr. Charles Stanhope's fale for thirty one guineas, in 
June, 1760. Lord Harrington wifhing to have the lot returned, 
Mr. Hollis replied, * his lordfhip's whole eftate mould not re- 
purchafe it.' It was engraved by J. B. Cipriani, in 1?60. Mr. 
Stanhope bought it of the executors of Milton's widow, for twenty 
guineas. The late Mr. Hollis, when his lodgings in Covent- 
garden were on fire, walked calmly out of the houfe with this 
picture by Janfen in his hand, neglecting to fecurc any other 
portable article of value. I prefume it is now in the pofieflion of 
Mr. Brand Hollis. Another, which had alio belonged to Mil- 
ton's widow, is in the pofieflion of the Onflow family. This, 
which is not at all like Faithorne's crayon-drawing, and by fome 
is fufpected not to be a portrait of Milton, has been more than 
once engraved by Vertue : who in his firft plate of it, dated 1731 , 
and in others, makes the age twenty-one. This has been alfo 
engraved by Houbraken in 1741, and by Cipriani. The ruff is 
much in the neat ftyle of painting ruffs, about and before 1628. 
The picture is handfomer than the engravings. This portrait is 
mentioned in Aubrey's manufcript Life of Milton, 1681, as then 
belonging to the widow. And he fays, ■ Mem. Write his nana 
in red Utters on his pictures uhich his uidoue ha$> to preferve them* 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 143 

could not relifh ; and I may add that he might I>e 

Vertue, in a Letter to Mr. Chriftian the feal engraver, in the 
Britifh Mufeum, about 1720, propofes to afk Prior the poet, 
whether there had not been a picture of Milton in the late lord 
Dorfet's Collection. The duchefs of Portland has [had] a mi- 
niature of his head, when young ; the face has a ftern thought- 
fulnefs, and, to ufe his own exprefliou, is fevere in youthful beauty* 
Before Peck's New Memoirs of Milton, printed 174-0, is a pre- 
tended head of Milton in exquifite mezzotinto, done by the fecond 
J. Faber: which is characteriftically unlike any other reprefent- 
ation of our author I remember to have feen. It is from a 
painting given to Peck by fir John Meres of Kirkby-Belers in 
Leiceftermire. But Peck himfelf knew that he was impofmg 
upon the publick. For having afked Vertue whether he thought 
it a picture of Milton, and Vertue peremptorily anfwering in the 
negative, Peck replied, * I'll have a fcraping from it, however; 
and let posterity fettle the difference.' Befides, in this picture 
the left hand is on a book, lettered Paradife Loft. But Peck fup- 
pofes the age about twenty-five, when Milton had never thought 
of that poem or fubject. Peck mentions a head done by Milton 
himfelf on board : but it does not appear to be authenticated. 

" The Richardfons, and next the Tonfons, [before Mr. Baker,] 
bad the admirable crayon*drawing above-mentioned. About the 
year 1725, Vertue carried this, drawing, with other reputed en- 
gravings and paintings of Milton, to Milton's favourite daughter 
Deborah, a very fenfible woman, who died the wife of Abraham 
Clark a weaver in Spitalfields, in 1727? aged 7o\ He contrived 
to have them brought into the room as if by accident, while he 
was converting with her. At feeing the drawing, taking no 
notice of the reft, me fuddenly cried out in great furprife, ' O 
Lord, that is the picture of my father ! How came you by it t And, 
ilroking down the hair of her forehead, added, * Juftfo my father 
wore his hair.' She was very like Milton, Compare Richardfon, 
Explan* Notes, p. xxxvi. This head, by Faithorne, was etched 
by Richardfon the father about 1734, with the addition of a 
Jaurel-crown to help the propriety of the motto. It is before the 
Explanatory Notes on the Paradife Loft, by the Richardfons. Lond, 
1734. 8vo. The bulls prefixed to Milton's Profe-JVorks by 
Birch 1738, and by Baroa 1753, are engraved by Vertue from 



144 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LtVft 

lefs inclined to be pleafed with the title, as, at that peridtf, 

a bad drawing made by J. Richardfon, after an original caft in 
plaifter about fifty. Of this caft Mr. Hollis gave a drawing by 
Cipriani to Speaker Onflow in 1759. It was executed, perhaps 
on the publication of the Defenfw, by one Pierce aii arlift of 
fome note, the fame who did the marble bull of fir Chriftopher 
Wren in the Bodleian library, or by Abraham Simon. Mr. Hollis 
bought it of Vertue. It has been remodelled in wax by Goflbt. 
Richardfon the father alfo etched this bull for The Poems and 
Critical E/Jays of S. Say,. 1745, 4to. But, I believe, this is the 
fame etching that I have mentioned above, to have been made 
by old Richardfon 1734, and which was now lent to Say's editor, 
1745, for Say's EJfays. 

" There is, however, another etching of Milton, by Richardfon, 
the younger, before he was blind, and when much younger than 
fifty, accompanied with fix bom baft verfes. ' Authentick Homer* 
&c/ The verfes are fubferibed ■ J. 11. jun/ The drawings, as 
well as engravings of Milton by Cipriani, are many. There is 
a drawing of our author by Deacon : it is taken from a proof- 
impreffion on wax of a feal by Thomas Simon, Cromwell's chief 
mint-mafter, firft in the hands of Mr. Yeo, afterwards of Mr. 
Hollis. This, a profile, has been lately engraved by Ryland. 
Mr. Hollis had a fmall fteel puncheon of Milton's head, a full 
front, for a feal or ring, by the fame T. Simon, who did many 
more of Milton's party in the fame way. The medal of Milton 
ftruck by Tanner, for auditor Benfon, is after the old plaifter- 
buft, and Faithorne's crayon-piece, chiefly the latter. So is the 
marble bull in the Abbey, by Ryfbrack, 1737. Scheemaker'ft 
marble buft, for Dr. Mead, and bought at his fale by Mr. Dun* 
combe, was profefledly and exa&ly copied from the plaifter-buft. 
Faithorne's is the moft common reprefentation of Milton's head. 
Either that, or the Onflow pi&ure, are the heads in Bentley's, 
and Tickell's, and Newton's editions. All by Vertue. Milton's 
daughter Deborah above-mentioned, the daughter of his firft 
wife, and his amanuenfis, told Vertue, that " her father was of 
a fair complexion, a little red in his cheeks, and light brown 
lank hair." Letter to Mr. Chriftan, ut fupr. MS. Br. Muf. 

" Since thefe impcrfed and hafty notices were thrown together, 
fir Jofhua Reynolds has purchafed a picture of Milton for one 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 145 

the appearance of effeminacy was attacked from the 

hundred guineas. It was brought to fir Joflma, 1784, by one 
Mr. Hunt, a printfeller and picture-dealer, who bought it of a 
broker ; but the broker does not know the perfon of whom he 
had it. The portrait is drefied in black, with a band ; and the 
painter's mark and date are ' S. C. 1653/ This is written on 
the back. l This picture belonged to Deborah Milton, who 
was her father's amanuenfis : at her death was fold to fir W. Da- 
venant's family. It was painted by Mr. Samuel Cooper, who was 
painter to Oliver Cromwell, at the time Milton was Latin Secre- 
tary to the Protector. The painter and poet were near of the 
fame age; Milton was born in l608, and died in 16/4, and 
Cooper was born in 1(509, and died in 1672, and were com- 
panions and friends till death parted them. Several encouragers 
and lovers of the fine arts at that time wanted this picture ; par- 
ticularly Lord Dorfet, John Somers efquire, fir Robert Howard, 
Dryden, Atterbury, Dr. Aldrich, and fir John Denham/ Lord 
Dorfet was probably the lucky man ; for this feems to be the 
very picture for which, as I have before obferved, Vertue wifhed 
Prior to fearch in Lord Dorfet's collection. Sir Jofliua Reynolds 
fays, * The picture is admirably painted, and with fuch a cha- 
racter of nature, that I am perfectly fure it was a ftriking likc- 
nefs. I have now a different idea of the countenance of Milton, 
which cannot be got from any of the other pictures that I have 
feen. It is perfectly preferved, which (hows that it has been fhut 
up in fome drawer; if it had been expofed to the light, the 
colours would long before this have vanimed/ It mufl be owned, 
that this miniature of Milton, lately purchafed by fir Jofliua 
Reynolds, ltrongly refembies Vandyke's picture of Selden in the 
Bodleian library at Oxford : and it is highly probable that Cooper 
mould have done a miniature of Selden as a companion to the 
heads of other heroes of the commonwealth. For Cooper painted 
Oliver Cromwell, in the poffeflion of the Frankland family ; and 
another, in profile, at Devonmire houfe : Richard Cromwell at 
Strawbery-hill : Secretary Thurloe, belonging to Lord James 
Cavendifh : and Ireton, Cromwell's general, now or late in the 
collection of Charles Polhili efq. a defcendant of Cromwell. The 
inference, however, might be applied to prove, that this head is 

vol. U L 



146 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

pulpit : " z We live in an age," fays bifhop Lake, 
" wherein it is hard to fay, whether in cloathes men grow 

Cooper's miniature of Milton. It has been copied by a female 
artift, in a ftyle of uncommon elegance and accuracy." 

The genuinenefs of this miniature, as the portrait of Milton, 
has been both aflerted, and denied, with confiderable warmth. 
See the Gentleman's Magazine for 1791, pp. 399, 603, 806. 
The difputants are Lord Hailes and Sir Jofhua hinvfelf. Moll 
connoifieurs arc inclined to believe the portrait to be that of 
Sclden. Sir Jofhua Reynolds, who died in 1792, makes the fol- 
lowing bcqueft, however, in his Will, to the Rev. William 
Mafon : " The miniature of Milton by Cooper." See Malone's 
Life of Sir J. Reynolds, prefixed to the Works of Sir J. R. vol. i. 
p. cxviii, 2d edit. 

Two miniatures of the poet, and of his mother, were fold, 
at the fale of the Portland Mufeum in 1786> for 34 1. See 
Gent. Mag. 17S6", p. 527* In 1792 Mr. Elderton fubmitted 
to the publick the outlines of a fuppofed miniature of the poet in 
his pofl'emon. See Cent. Mag. 1792,- p^ 17- In 1797 a malterly 
engraving,, from an original picture in the pofTeflion of Capel 
Lofft efq. believed alio to be that of Milton, was made by G. 
Quinton. At Weft Wycombe Manor-houfe, in Buckinghamshire, 
there is a fine portrait of Milton, fuppofed to be an original. See 
Langlcy's Hid, and Antiq, of the Hundred of Defborough, C°, 
of Bucks. 1797, P- 417* I have been indebted to the kindnefs of 
the late John Charnock jun. efq. of Greenwich, for an. excellent 
original painting, affirmed by fome to have been a portrait of 
Milton, by Dobfon, but conjectured by others to have been a per- 
formance of Riley, who lived rather too late to delineate Milton. 
Some have fuppofed it may be a head of his brother Chriflopher. 
It is, however, remarkable, that Mr, Greenfladc, a collector of 
paintings, who reiides in Bond-ftreet, London,, has a copy of this 
very painting, which has been called a portrait of the poet. 
Mr. Waldron is in pofieflion of a painting, which exhibits a 
likcnefi of the poet in bis middle age. To the modern en- 
gravings of the poet may be added an interesting one by Mr. 
Silvefter Harding, from a painting in the pofleffian of the late 
Lord Orford. 

8 Sermons preached at >Yclls by bifhop Lake, fol. 1(>29, p. 6*7. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 147 

more womannifh, or women more mannifh !" Milton had 
a very fine {kin and frefh complexion. His hair was 
of a light brown ; and, parted on the foretop, hung 
down in curls upon his moulders. His features were 
regular ; and when turned of forty, he has himfelf told 
us, he was generally allowed to have had the appear- 
ance of being ten years younger. He has alfo repre- 
fented himfelf as a man of moderate ftature, neither 
too lean nor too corpulent ; and fo far endued with 
ftrength and fpirit, that, as he always wore a fword, 
he wanted not, while light revifited his eyes, the {kill 
or the courage to ufe it. His eyes were of a greyifh 
colour ; which, when deprived of fight, did not betray 
their lois : At firft view, and at a fmall diftance, it 
was difficult to know that he was blind. The tefti- 
mony of Aubrey refpe&ing the perfon of Milton is 
happily exprefled : " His harmonicall and ingeniofe 
foul did lodge in a beautiful and well proportioned 
body." Milton's voice * was mufically fweet, as his 
ear was mufically correct. Wood defcribes his de- 
portment to have been affable, and his gait erect and 
manly, befpeaking courage and undauntednefs. Of 
his figure in his declining days Richardfbn has left 
the following {ketches. " b An ancient clergyman of 
Dorfetihire, Dr. Wright, found John Milton in a 
fmall chamber hung with rufty green, fitting in an 
elbow chair, and drefled neatly in black, pale but not 
cadaverous, his hands and fingers gouty and with chalk 
ftones. — He ufed alfo to {it in a gray coarfe cloth coat, 
at the door of his houfe near Bunhill-fields, in warm 

a Aubrey fays that " he had a delicate tunable voice," and 
that " he pronounced the letter R very hard." 
b Life of Milton, 1734, p. iv. 
I 2 



148 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LITE 

funny weather, to enjoy the frefh air; and fo, a3 well 
as in his room, received the vifits of people of dif- 
tinguifhed parts as well as quality." 

His domeitick habits were thofe of a fober and 
temperate ftudent. Of wine, or of any ftrong liquours, 
he drank little. In his diet he was rarely influenced 
by delicacy of choice. He once delighted in walking, 
and ufing exercife ; and appears to have amufed him- 
felf in botanical purfyits : but, after he was confined 
by age and blindnefs, he had a machine to fwing. in 
for the prefervation of his health. In funimer he then 
refted in bed from nine to four, in winter to five. If, 
at thefe hours, he was hot difpofed to rife, he had a 
perfon by his bed-fide to read to him. When he firft 
rofe, he heard a chapter in the Hebrew Bible, and 
commonly ftudied till twelve; then ufed fome exercife 
for an hour ; then dined ; c afterwards played on the 
organ or bafs-viol, and either lung himfelf or made 
his wife fing, who, lie faid, had a good voice but no 
ear. It is related that, when educating his nephews, 
il d he had made them fongjiers, and fing from the time 
they were with him.' 1 No poet, it may be obierved, 
lias more frequently or more powerfully commended 
the charms of mufick than Milton. He wifhed per- 
haps to rival, and he has fuccefsfully rivalled, the 

own obfervations, in his treatife Of Educatioii. 
** The interim of unfweating themfelves regularly, and conve- 
nient reft before meat, may both with profit and delight be taken 
up in recreating and compofmg their travailed fpirita with the 
iolemn and divine harmonies of mufick heard or learned, &c. 
The like ulj'o would not he unexptditnt after meat, to aflifl and 
1 nature in her full concoction, and fend their minds back 
to fttidy in good tune and faiisfadion." 
* A MS. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 149 

fweeteft defcriptions of a favourite bard, whom the 
melting voice appears to have often enchanted ; the 
tender Petrarch. After his regular indulgence in 
rnufical relaxation, he ftudied till fix ; then entertained 
his vifitors till eight; then enjoyed a light fupper; 
and, after a pipe of tobacco and a giafs of water, re- 
tired to bed. 

It has been obferved by Dr. Newton that all, who 
had written any accounts of the life of Milton, agreed 
that he was affable and inftructive in converfation, of 
an equal and cheerful temper ; " yet I can eafily be- 
lieve," fays the learned biographer, " that he had a 
fumcient fenfe of his own merits, and contempt enough 
for his adverfaries." Milton acknowledges his own 
i( honeft haughtinefs and fdf-efteem" with which, 
however, he profefles to have united a becoming 
," modefty e ." Aubrey notices that he as " fatyrical." 

His literature was immenfe. Of the Hebrew, with 
its two dialects, and of the Greek, Latin, Italian, 
French, and Spantfh languages, he was a mafter. In 
Latin, Dr. Johnfon obferves, his fkill was fuch as 
places him in the firft rank of Writers and criticks. 
In the Italian he was alfo particularly ikilled. His 
Sonnets in that language have received the higheft 
commendations from Italian criticks, both of his own 
and of modern times f . If he had written generally 
in Italian, it has been fuppofed, by the late lord Or- 
ford, that he would have been the moft perfect poet 
in modern languages ; for his own ftrength of thought 
would have condenfed and hardened that fpeech to a 

e Profe-Works, vol. i. p. 177* ed. 1698. 

f See alfo Algarotti's ingenious criticifm on his works. Opcre 
M Conte Algarotti, Ven. 1794, torn. x. p. 39, &c. 



150 SOME ACCOUNT OF LIFE THE 

proper degree. The Academy Delia Crufca con- 
i ulted tiim on the critical niceties of their language. 
In nis early days indeed he had become deeply ena- 
moured of " the two famous renowners of Beatrice 
and Laura E ." It has been rightly remarked, that 
he read almoft all authors, and improved by all : He 
relates himfelf, that his " round of ftudy and reading 
was ceafelefs." 

His favourite book was the Book of God. To Mil- 
ton, when a child, Revelation opened not her richeft 
ftores in vain. To devotional fubjecls his infant ftrains 
were dedicated ; and never did " his harp forget" to 
acknowledge the aids which he derived from the Mufe 
of facred infpiration. The remark of Gibbon that 
h the fublime genius of Milton was cramped by the 
fyftem of our religion, and never appeared to fo great 
an advantage as when he fhook it a little off, will be 
admitted by few. It is a juft and admirable obfer- 
vation of Mr. Hayley, that, " if fome paffionate ad- 
mirers of antiquity feem to lament the fall of paganilm, 
as fatal to poetry, to painting, and to fculpture, a 
more liberal and enlightened fpirit of criticifm may 
rather believe, what is very poffible, I apprehend, to 
demonftrate, that Chriftianity can hardly be more 
favourable to the purity of morals, than it might be 
rendered to the perfection of thefe delightful arts. 
Milton himfelf may be regarded as an obvious and 
complete proof, that the pofition is true as far as 
poetry is concerned." The Meffiah of Klopftock, 
and particularly the Calvary of Cumberland, may be 
added as fine examples of the connection between 

P Profc-Work.% vol. i. p. 177 ? rf |. if, 7)8. 

h Efifty on the Study of Literature, 170'1, p. 24. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 151 

true religion and poetry. When modern Republi- 
canism pretends to confider Milton as her auxiliary, 
let her remember, with fhame, the fancldty of manners 
which his pages breathe, and the Chriftian leffons 
which they inculcate. To him " fight more deteft- 
able," than the object of her hopes could not poffibly 
be prefented. The deligns of the crafty fenfualift, 
and of the befotted ungrateful atheift, it was his con- 
ftant endeavour, not to promote, but to overthrow. 
" Itmuit gratify every Chriftian to reflect," fays Mr., 
Hay ley, " that the man of our country moft eminent 
for energy of mind, for intenfenefs of application, and 
for franknefs and intrepidity in afferting whatever he 
believed to be the cauie of truth, was lb confirmedly 
devoted to Chriftianity, that he feems to have made 
the Bible, not only the rule of his conduct, but the 
prime director of his genius. — Nor mould I omit his 
own manly anticipation of applaufe : " l Hoping that 
his name might deferve to appear, not among the 
mercenary crew of falfe pretenders to learning, but 
the free and ingenuous fort of fuch as evidently were 
born for ftudy, and love learning for itfelf, not for 
lucre, or anv other end but the fervice of God and 
truth, and perhaps that lafting fame and perpetuity of 
praife which God and good men have confcnted mall 
be the reward of thofe whofe publifhed labours ad- 
vance the good of mankind," 

The claffical books, in which he is reprefented to 
have moft delighted, were Homer, Ovid's Metamor- 
phofes, and Euripides. The firft he could alinoit 
entirely repeat. Of the lalt he is faid to have been 

' In his Areopagitica. 



152 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

a reader, not only with the tafte of a poet, but 
with the k minu tends of a Greek critick. His Euri- 
pides, in two volumes, Paul Stephens's quarto edition 
of 1602, with many marginal emendations in his own 
hand, is now the property of Mr. Cradock of Gumly 
in Leicefterfhire. Of thefe notes fome have been 
adopted by Joihua Barnes, and fome have been lately 
printed by Mr. Jodrell. In the firft volume, page 
the firft, is the name of John Milton, with the price 
of the book at 12 s. 6d., and the date of the year 
1 634. I have to notice the exiftence of another trea- 
fure, bearing alfo the fame date, the price 3s., and the 
name of John Milton, written by himfelf on the blank 
page oppofite the title ; his copy of Lycophron, with 
his own marginal obfervations. Of this remarkable 
curiofity I received my information from Mr. Walker, 
by whom it had been l infpecred in the library of Lord 
Charlemont. From Milton himfelf we learn, that " the 
divine volumes of Plato and his equall Xenophon" were 
principal objects of his regard; and that he preferred 
Sail ult to all the Roman hiltorians. Demofthcnes has 
been fuppofed, by Lord Monboddo and Mr. Ilayley, to 
have been ftudied by him minutely and fuccdshiily. On 
contemporary authors Milton has beftowed little praife. 
Dr. Newton notices that he has condefcended, more 
than once, to applaud Selden ; but that he feems dif- 
pofed to cenfure, rather than commend, the reft. He has 

k See Warton's 2d edit, of the Smaller Poems, p. 568. And 
Jodrell's Uluftrations of Euripides, 1781, pp. 34, 336. 

1 My friend, the Rev. Mr. Meen, has fince been favoured 
nith the ufe of this volume. And it is to be hoped, that his 
excellent verfion of Lyoophron, accompanied with his own acute 
remark-, as well as Milton's marginal obfervations, oil this 
author, will foon be prefented to the publick. 



AND WRITINGS OP MILTON. 353 

extolled however, in his Areopagitica, the merits of 
Lord Brooke, who had lately fallen in the fervice of the 
Parliament, and had written a treatiie againft the 
Englljh epifcopacy, and againft the danger of Setts and 
Schifms, in terms of fuperabundant eulogy. He has alfo 
fpoken of John Cameron, a learned divine and com- 
mentator, in terms of high refpecl;; calling him " m a 
late writer, much applauded," as alfo " n an ingenious 
writer and in high efteem." 

His political principles were thpfe of a thorough re- 
publican ; which have been afcribed, by Dr. Johnfon, 
to a native violence of temper, and to a hatred of all 
whom he was required to obey. The frequent afperity 
of this eminent biographer towards Milton, has been 
repeatedly noticed, by Mr. Hayley, with reprehenfion 
and regret ; and in the following inftance, with all the 
eloquence and dignity of fublime inftruclion. 

" There can hardly be any contemplation more painful, 
than to dwell on the virulent exceffes of eminent and good 
men ; yet the utility of fuch contemplation may be equal to 
its pain. What mildnefs and candour mould it not inftil into 
ordinary mortals to obferve, that even genius and virtue 
•weaken their title to refpecl;, in proportion as they recede 
from that evangelical charity, which mould influence every 
man in his judgement of another. 

" The ftrength and the acutenefs of fenfation, which partly 
conftitute genius, have a great tendency to produce virulence, 
if the mind is not perpetually on its guard againft that fubtle, 
infinuating, and corrofive paffion, hatred againft all whole 
opinions are oppofite to our own. Johnfon profeffed, in one 
of his letters, to love a good hater ; and, in the Latin cor- 
refpondence of Milton, there are words that imply a fimi- 
Jarity of fentiment ; they both thought there might be a 
fan&ified bitternefs, to ufe an expreflion of Milton, towards 

m In his Tetxachordon. a Ibid. 



15* SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

political and religious opponents ; yet furely thefe two devout 
men were both wrong, and both in fome degree unchriftian 
in this principle. To what Angular iniquities of judgement 
fnch a principle may lead, we might, perhaps, have had a 
moil ftriking, and a double proof, had it been poflible for 
thefe two energetick writers to exhibit alternately a portrait 
of each other. Milton, adorned with every graceful endow- 
ment, highly and holily accomplifhed as he was, appears, in 
the dark colouring of Johnfon, a moft unamiable being ; but 
could he revifit earth in his mortal character, with a wilh to 
retaliate, what a picture might be drawn, by that fublime and 
offended genius, of the great moralift, who has treated him 
with fuch excefs of afperity. The paflions are powerful 
colourifts, and marvellous adepts in the art of exaggeration ; 
but the portraits executed by love (famous as he is for over- 
charging them) are infinitely more faithful to nature, than 
gloomy fketches from the heavy hand of hatred ; a pailion 
not to be trufted or indulged even in minds of the higheft 
purity or power ; fince hatred, though it may enter the field 
of conteft under the banner of juftice, yet generally becomes 
jo blind and outrageous, from the heat of contention, as to 
execute, in the name of virtue, the worft purpofes of vice. 
Hence arifes that fpecies of calumny the moft to be regretted, 
the calumny lavimed by men of talents and worth on their 
equals or fuperiours, whom they have raftily and blindly hated 
for a difference of opinion. To fuch hatred the fervid and 
oppoiite characters, who gave rife to this obfervation, were 
both more inclined, perhaps, by nature and by habit, than 
Chriftianity can allow. The freedom of thefe remarks on two 
very great, and equally devout, though different writers, may 
pollibly offend the pai -tizans of both : in that cafe my conlb- 
latioq will be, that I have endeavoured to fpcak of them 
with that temperate though undaunted fincerity, which may 
iutisly tin; fpirit of each in a purer ftate of exiltence." 

controversy, and by the indulgence of early 
prejudices, Milton was undoubtedly loured. But, 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 155 

If the conceptions of his mind may be taken from 
his poetry, he will not be thought to have been by- 
nature unamiable. Of Milton, however he might 
be miitaken in the means, the conftant aim and end 
was liberty. Yet with the love of liberty who will 
affert his attachment to Cromwell to have been con- 
fiftent ? But he is ° fuppoled to have been deceived 
by the matchlefs hypocrify of that ufurper ; and, in 
the uprightnefs of his mind, not to have fufpecled 
the falfe dhTembler as adverfe to his own fpirit of 
freedom. Still it may be wondered that he, who fo 
well knew the nature of true liberty, which 

" always with right reafon dwells 

" Twinn'd, and from her hath no dividual being ;" 

it may be wondered that he, I fay, ihould not have 
timely perceived the defigns of the tyrant whom he 
ferved. Influenced by his uprightnefs, however, he 
had before offered to Cromwell, with undaunted 
zeal, a folemn and energetick p leffon of conduct 
Nor was Milton exactly that friend to the majefty of 
the people, which the modern illuminators of the 
world have imagined. For, to that pretended fove- 
reignty, what greater infult can be offered than the 
appellations, with which he has diftinguiihed the 
people, of a q " herd confus'd, a mifcellaneous rabble 1" 
The well-known expreffion of r Burke muft yield to 
thefe kindred phrafes. 

e See the Note on Par. Loji, B. iii. 683. 

P Def. Sec. Profe-Works, vol. iii. p. 109, ed. 1698. 

3 Par. Regained, B. iii. 40. 

1 See the Notes on Par. Reg. B. iii. 49. Burke, I may ob- 
ferve, was an ardent admirer of Milton. 1 learn, from Mr, 
Walker, that this great orator was a diftinguiihed member of a 
Literary Club, iniututed in Dublin in 1747, in which he feme- 



156 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

The theological fentiments of Milton are faid to have 
been often changed ; from Puritanifm to Calvinifm ; 
from Calvinifm to an efteem for Arminius; and 
finally, from an accordance with Independents * and 

times held the Secretary's pen, and fometimes filled the prefident's 
chair; and that, in the original minutes of this fociety, his early 
Miltonick tafte is thus recorded. " Friday, June 5 th . 1747. 
Mr. Burke, being ordered to fpeak the fpeech of Moloch, receives 
applaufe for the delivery ; it being in characler : Then the fpeech 
was read, and criticifed upon; its many beauties illuflrated ; the 
chief judged to be its conformity with the character of Moloch : 

* No ; let us rather choofe, 

■ Arm'd with Hell-flames and fury, all at once 
* O'er Heaven's high towers to force refiftlefs way/ 

The words ' all at once* (the metre not confidered) feemed, to 
the whole alTembly, to hurt the fentence by flopping the rapi- 
dity, and checking the fiercenefs, of it; making it too long and 
tedious. Then was Belia^s fpeech read, to the great delight of 
the hearers ; whofe opinion was, that Homer only can be com- 
pared to Milton, not only for the beauties that mine in every 
verfe, but likewife for the juft and lively colours in which each 
character was drawn ; for that none but Homer, like him, ever 
fupported fuch fpirit and exa6tnefe in the fpeeches of fuch 
a contraft and variety of perfons." Thefe notices will not fcem 
tedious ; for they foggelt an opinion, that the fineft oratory of 
modern times might owe its origin, and perfection, to the poetry 
ef Milton. 

1 See before, p. 64. Petit, in his Vi/vm of Purgatory, pub- 
lished in ]6'85, introduces Milton in converfation with a Pro- 
.,n< ial of the Jefuits, to whom " the fanatical rebels of Eng- 
defcribed as M imps 4 /' and, " becaufe Milton was a 
mail of fingular eloquence," the author represents him, as fpiri- 
tedly expoftulating with the Provincial for being " denied the 
honour which is fo eafily granted to men vaitly beneath my merits 
and defertl ; for what can any man doe for the promotion, of yvifr 
intcrefii that I have not done?" pp, ,98, yy, &c. 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 151 

Anabaptifts, to a dereliction of every denomination of 
Proteftants. From any heretical peculiarity of opi- 
nion he was free. Dr. Newton confiders him as a 
Quietift, full of the interiour of religion, though he 
fo little regarded the exteriour. Dr. Johnfon ob- 
ferves, that " he grew old without any vifible wor- 
Ihip ; but, that he lived without prayer, can hardly 
be affirmed; his ftudies and meditations were an 
habitual prayer." From a remark of Toland, that, 
" in the latter part of his life, Milton frequented 
none of the affemblies of any particular feci: of 
Chriftians, nor made ufe of their particular rites in 
his family " have arifen aflertions without proofs, 
by other biographers, that " he did not life any re- 
ligious rite" and that " he never u/ed prayer in his 
family." I am inclined to believe that he, who, in 
his divine poem, ito carefully defcribes the morning 
and evening worlhip of our firft. parents, the firft 
and laft hours of the day employed in devotion, 
could hardly be negligent of reverence to God in 
his own houfhold. I muft not, however, withhold 
from notice a ftrange alfertion of Milton, reipecting 
prayer : " u I believe that God is no more moved 
with a prayer elaborately penned, than men truly 
charitable are moved with the penned fpeech of a 
beggar !" To his determination of affociating with no 
Church we owe the mafterly and judicious obferva- 
tion of Johnfon : "To be of no Church is danger- 
ous. Religion, of which the rewards are diftant, 
and which is animated only by Faith and Hope, will 
glide by degrees out of the mind, unlefs it be in- 

u Eiconoclaftes, Profe-Works, vol. ii. p* 511. ed. 1698. 



158 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

vigorated and reimpreffed by external ordinances, 
by itated calls to worfhip, and the falutary influence 
of example." Of our liturgy, as of epifcopacy, 
Milton has often exprefled his contempt. He is 
* laid to have been a principal founder of the Calves- 
Head Club; a feftival, which began to be held, 
during the uiurpation, on the thirtieth of January ; 
in cppqfition to Dr. Hammond, and other divines of 
the Church of England, who met privately to lament 
that day, in Y a form of prayer y little different from 
what we now find in the liturgy. 

Milton's circumftances were never very affluent. 
The eftate left him by his father was but fmall. 
In the civil war he fuftained the lofs of a con- 
lidcrable perfonal property, which he had lent 
to the Parliament. As Latin Secretary he en- 
joyed an annual falary of two hundred pounds, 
together with an eltate of about fixty pounds 
a year which belonged to the plundered abbey 
of Weftminfter. Of thefe revenues, as well as 
of two thoufand pounds which he had placed in the 
Excife-Ofhce, he was deprived at the z Reftoratiom 

" See the Secret Hiftory of the Calves-Head Club, 170.Q, p. 17. 

y See Kennett's Rogifter, p. 38. See alfo " Private Forms of 
Prayer, fitted for the late fad times. Particularly, a Form of 
Prayer for the thirtieth of January, morning and evening. 
With Additions, &c. Lond. 115601" 12 mo . Dr. Hammond is 
fuppofed to be the author. 

■ In 179 1 died Jonathan Hartop, of the village of Aldbo- 
rough mar Porough-bridge in Yorkfhire, at the great age of 
138. He is laid to have " lent Milton fifty pounds, foon after 
the Restoration, which the bard returned him with honouiy 
though not without much difficulty, as his circumftances were 
very low. Mr. Hartop would have declined receiving it; but 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 159 

He had before loft two thoufand pounds by entruft- 
ing it to a fcrivener ; and, in the fire of London, his 
houfe in Bread-ftreet was burnt. To Milton, how- 
ever, the deficiency of wealth was little difappoint- 
ment. He had thirfted more after intellectual 
riches. The paucity of his wants, and the frugal 
management of what he retained, enabled him to 
live without dhtrefs. Of the property which he 
left, the publication of his Nuncupative Will has 
rectified the miftaken accounts of all his biographers 
before Mr. Hayley. If he fold his library before 
his death, as fome have afferted, he was perhaps 
compelled to it by the pillage it had already fiif- 
tained, and by the fear of its total plunder. 

Of his family I mail fubjoin a brief account. All 
his biographers notice his younger brother, Chrif- 
topher, and his fifter, Anne. Of two other fifters the 
exiftence has never been related. I have found, 
however, in the regifter of All-hallows Bread- 
ftreet, the * births of Sarah and Tabitha Milton, and 

the pride of the poet was equal to his genius, and he fent the 
tnoney with an angry letter, which was found among the 
curious poflefiions of that venerable old man." Eafton's Human 
Longevity, 8vo. Salifbury, 1799? PP- 241, 242. This curious 
anecdote of Milton had appeared in the Wolverhampton Chronicle 
and Staff or djhire Advertifer of March 31, 1790, Mr. Hartop 
being then living, and the letter defcribed as extant. 

a i( The xv th daye of July l6l2 was baptized Sara, the 
dawghter of John Mylton, fcrivener. She was buried the vi tb 
of Auguft following in the church. 

" The xxx th of January, l6l3, [that is 1G13-14,] was bap- 
tized Tabitha, the dawghter of Mr. John Mylton. 

K The third daye of December l6l5 was baptized Christo- 
pher, the fonne of John Mylton of this pifhe, fcrivenor* 
Extracls from the Regifter. 



ifo SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

the death only of Sarah, to be recorded. Chrife 
topher was a royalift, and became, long after his 
brother's death, a judge. Through his brother's in- 
tereft, he had compounded for his eftate, in the re- 
bellion, at the eafy price of b eighty pounds. Anne 
muft have been elder than either of her brothers ; 
for her birth is not to be found in the regifter 
already mentioned: She was probably the eldeft 
child, and born before her father fettled in Bread- 
ftreet. Milton's Verfes on her daughter, written in 
his feventeenth year, ferve to corroborate this fup- 
pofition. She was firft married to Mr. Phillips, 
afterwards to Mr. Agar, a friend of her firft huf- 
band, who fucceeded him in the Crown-Office of 
the Court of Chancery. By her firft hufband me 
had two fons, Edward and John, whom Milton edu- 
cated ; by her fecond, two daughters. His brother j 
Chriftopher, had two daughters, Mary and Cathe- 
rine; and a fon, Thomas, who fucceeded Mr. 
Agar in his office. Of Milton's children, who fur* 
vived him, Mr. Warton's concluding Note on the 
Nuncupative Will gives a diftincl account. The 
feveral branches of his family appear to be now 
extinct I may here obferve that the cafe of Debo- 
rah, the youngeft, which Mr. Warton deplores with 
true fenfibility, was c firft noticed in a very feeling 
manner, in MifCs JVeekly Journal, April 29, 1727, 
and commended her to part of the little patronage 
which file obtained. While it has been obferved, 

h So recorded in the volume of Compafitions, already men- 
tioned, p. 6o. 

r: It is alio printed in the European Magazine for 17&7, p. 6&« 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 161 

that the Nuncupative Will of Milton prefents indeed 
a melancholy picture of domeftick connections, and 
that his conduct towards his daughters has been feel- 
ingly defended even by an eminent female pen ; it 
has not been noticed, that part of the charge 
brought againft him, I mean his teaching his chil- 
dren to read and pronounce Greek and feveral^other 
languages without underftanding any but Englifh, 
may be thought more ftrange and unaccountable, in- 
almuch as he appears to have been diftinguiihed for 
the eftimation in which he once held literary women ; 
a circumftance which no biographer of Milton has 
hitherto recorded. Doctor Newton, indeed, face- 
tioufly tells us, that Milton ufed to fay that one 
tongue was enough for a woman ! But contemporary 
information will beft illuftrate this curious point in 
the hiltory of the poet. " d We believe," fays the 
anfwerer to his Doctrine and Difcipline of Divorce, 
" you count no xvoman to due coywerfation acceflibk, 
as to you, except Jhe can [peak Hebrew, Greek, 
Latine, and French, and difpute againft the Canon 
law asxvell as you, or at leaft be able to hold difcourfe 
with you. But other gentlemen of good qualitie are 
content with meaner and fewer endowments, as you 
know well enough." — I now recur to the defence of 
Milton by the diftinguiihed lady, who fpeaking of 
the modern revolutionary fpirit in families, and ele- 
gantly enforcing the fubordination of domeftick man- 
ners, obferves " that, e among the faults with which 

d Anfwer to the Doct. and Difc. of Divorce, 4 t0 . l64,U p. l6\ 
e Strictures on the Modern Syftem of Female Education, by 
Mrs. Hannah More, vol. i. p, 147, 6th edit. 179.9. 

vol. i. M 



162 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE 

it has been too much the falhion of recent times 
to load the memory of the incomparable Milton, one 
of the charges brought againft his private character 
(for with his political character we have here nothing 
to do) has been, that he was fo fevere a father as to 
have compelled his daughters, after he was blind, 
to read aloud to him, for his fole pleafure, Greek 
and Latin authors of which they did not underftand 
a word. But this is in fact nothing more than an 
inftancc of the ftrict domeftick regulations of the age 
in which Milton lived ; and mould not be brought 
forward as a proof of the feverity of his individual 
temper. Nor indeed in any cafe fhould it ever be 
confidered as an hardlhip for an affectionate child 
to amufe an afflicted parent, even though it mould 
be attended with a heavier facrifice of her own plea- 
fure than in the prefent inftance." 

From Milton's laft wife, (whofe good name alfo 
has been f calumniated,) the early admirers of the 
poet learned that he ufed to compofe his poetry 
chiefly in winter, and on his waking in a morning 
dictated to her fometimes twenty or thirty verfes ; 
that Spenfer, Shakfpeare, and Cowley, were his 
favourite Englilh poets ; and that he pronounced 
Dryden to be a rhymift rather than a poet. Dryden's 
beft poems had not yet appeared. To Dryden, who 
often vifited him, Milton acknowledged that Spenfer 
was his original. 

From Aubrey's manufcript it appears that Milton's 
" familiar learned acquaintance" were Andrew 
Marvell, Cyriack Skinner, and J)r. Paget. I have 

1 S*'C Mr. Wai'tcw's notes, fand r, on the Nuncupative WiU v 



AND WRITINGS OF MILTON. 163 

often wondered that Milton, who has affectionately 
recorded the good qualities of many friends, mould 
have omitted to grace his pages with a tribute of 
refpect to the name of Henry More, the celebrated 
Platonift, his fellow-collegian ; by whom Mr. Warton 
fuppofes him to have been led to the ftudy of the 
divine philofophy, and of whole poetry I am per- 
iuaded, he was an g attentive reader. 

I muft not clofe this humble account of the great 
poet, without venturing to obferve, that Dr. Johnfon, 
in ridiculing the notion that a writer Ihould fuppofe 
himfelf influenced by times or fealbns, has not only 
too haftily decided on the intellectual impulfes of 
Milton, but has alfo h contradicted himfelf. 

Nor can I here forbear to deplore the unwarranted 
afperity, with which the lait biographer of Milton 
would confign to oblivion and contempt the critical 
labours of Milton's beft commentator. " * For 
borrowing two or three exprefiions from II Penferqfo 
and the Comus" fays Dr. Symmons, " Mr. Warton 
could thus fpeak of Pope : ' Pope was a gleaner of the 
old Englilh poets ; and he was here pilfering from 
ohfolete Englilh poetry without the leaft fear or 
danger of being detected.' A few years, however, 
will fweep this acute and candid detector of pla- 
giarifm to oblivion ; and will leave the laurel of 
Eloifa's poet without the veftige of a ftain." It is 

2 See the note on Comus, ver. 429. 

h " He [Johnfon] here admits an opinion of the human mind 
being influenced by feafons, which he ridicules in his writings " 
Bofwell's Life of Dr. Johnfon, S d - edit. vol. ii. p. 264. 
Life of Milton, 1806, p. 543. 
w 2 



164 SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE, &c. 

not my intention, in defending Mr. Warton, to in* 
finuate that any " ftain ihould be fixed on the laurel 
of Eloifa's poet ;" nor is it my province here to illus- 
trate the beautiful application of his borrowings ; 
but I will not helitate to affure the learned biographer 
and the world, that the obligations of Pope to 
our elder poetry, and efpecially to the poetry of 
Milton, are more numerous than have hitherto been 
noticed, 



THE 

NUNCUPATIVE WILL* 



OF 



JOHN MILTON % 

WITH NOTES, 
SY THE REVEREND T. W1RTON, B.B, 



MEMORANDUM, that John Milton, late of 
the pariih of St. Giles Cripplegate in the Countie 
of Middlefex Gentleman, deceafed, at feverall times 
before his death, and in particular, on or about the 
twentieth day of July, in the year of our Lord God 
1674, being of perfect mind and memorie, declared 
his Will and intent as to the difpofall of his eftate 
after his death, in thefe words following, or of like 
effect : " The portion due to me from Mr. Powell, 
my former wife's father, I leave to the unkind chil- 
dren I had by her, having received no parte of it : 
but my meaning is, they mall have no other benefit 
of my eftate than the faid portion, and what I have 
befides done for them ; they having been very undu- 
tifull to me. All the refidue of my eftate I leave to 
[the] difpofall of Elizabeth my loving wife." Which 

* [From Mr. Warton's 2d edit, of Milton's Smaller Poems, 
1791.] 

* As propounded in the Prerogative Court, 



166 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

words, or to the fame effect, were fpoken in tfoe 
prefence of Christopher Milton \ 

X [Mark of] Elizabeth Fisher. c 

Nov. 23, 1674 d . 

I. 

The Allegation propounding the Will, on which 
Allegation the Witnejfes be examined'', 

Negotium Teftamentarium, five probacionis Tef- 
tamenti nuncupativi, five ultimae Voluntatis, Joiian- 

b John Milton's younger brother: a ftrong royalift, and a 
profefied papift. After the civil war, he made his compofition 
through his brother's intereft. Being a practitioner in the law, 
he lived to be an ancient Bencher of the Inner Temple : was 
made a judge of the Common Pleas, and knighted by king James 
the fecond ; but, on account of his age and infirmities, he was at 
length difmiffed from bufmefs, and retired to Ipfwich, where he 
refided all the latter part of his life. 

c A fervant-maid of John Milton. 

d Regiftr. Cur. Praerog. Cant. This Will was contefted by 
Mary, Deborah, and Anne Milton, daughters of the poet's firft 
wife Mary, daughter of Mr. Richard Powel, of Foreflhill in Ox- 
fordlhire. The caufe came to a regular fentence, which was given 
againft the Will ; and the Widow, Elizabeth, was ordered to 
take Adminiftration inftead of a Probate. I mull add here, that 
this caufe, the fubject of which needed no additional 1 (litre from 
great names, was tried by that upright and able ftatefman, Sir 
Leoline Jenkins, Judge of the Prerogative Court, and Secretary 
of State; and that the depofitions were taken in part before Dr. 
Trumbull, afterwards Sir Willam Trumbull, Secretary of State, 
and the celebrated friend of Pope. As a eircumftantial and au* 
thentick hiitory of this procefs, the following inilruments, which 
were otherwife thought too curious to be fupprcfled, are fub- 
joincd. 

c Viz. Chriftopher Milton, and John Milton's two fcr- 
vant-maids Elizabeth and Mary Fiflier. Witnefles on the part 
of the widow. 



WILL OF MILTON. 167 

nis Milton, nuper dum vixit parochise S. iEgidii 
Cripplegate London generofi, defuncti, habent, &c. 
promotum per Elizabetham Milton f Reli&am, et 
Legatariam principalem nominatam in Teftamento 
nuncupativo, five ultima Voluntate, di6li defuncti, 
contra Mariam, Annam, et Deboram Milton, filial 
dicti defuncti. 

Thompson. Clements. 

f This was his third wife, Elizabeth Minftiull, of a gentle- 
man's family in Chefhire. He married her at the recommendation 
of his friend, and her relation, Dr. Paget, about the year l66l, 
and in his fifty-fourth year, foon after he had obtained his pardon 
from the reftored king; being now blind and infirm, and wanting 
fome more conftant and confidential companion than a fervant to 
attend upon his perfon. The elder Richardfon infinuates, that 
this lady, being no poet or philofopher like her hufband, ufed fre- 
quently to teaze him for his careleflhefs or ignorance about money- 
matters, and that fhe was a termagant. He adds, that foon after 
their marriage, a royal offer was made to Milton of the refump- 
tion of his old department of Latin Secretary, and that, being 
ftrongly preffed by his wife to an acceptance, he fcornfully re- 
plied, *f Thou art in the right; you, as other women, would ride 
in your Coach. My aim is to live and die an honeji man.'' Life, 
&c. p. xcix. feq. edit. 1734. From thefe papers, however, it 
appears, that fhe confulted her hufbands humours, and treated his 
infirmities with tendcrnefs. After his death in 1674, fhe retired 
to Namptwich in Chefhire, where fhe died about 1729* Mr. 
Pennant fays, her father, Mr. Minfhull, lived at Stoke in that 
neighbourhood. W. Tour, and Gough's Camden, Chefhire, 
p. 436. The third edition of Paradife Loft was publifhed in 
1678 : and this is the poet's widow, to whom the copy of that 
work was then to devolve by original agreement, but who fold 
all her claims to Samuel Simmons, his bookfeller, for eight 
pounds, according to her receipt given Decemb. 21, 1680. 

[Among the letters of Mr. G. Grey to his brother Dr. Zach. 
Grey, is the following notice of this lady's death, which has 



168 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

Secundo Andreae, A. D. 1674. Quo die.... 
Thompfon, nomine, procuratione, ac ultimus pro- 
curator legitimus, dictas Elizabethan Milton, omni- 
bus melioribus et effect-ualioribus [efFicacioribus] via, 
modo, et meliori forma, necnon ad omnem juris 
effectum, exhibuit Teftamentum nuncupativum dicli 
Johannis Milton defuncti, fie incipiens, " Me- 
morandum, that John Milton, late of the parifli 
of S. Giles, Cripplegate. &c." Which words, or 
words to the fame effect, were fpoken in the pre- 
fence of Chriftopher Milton, and Elizabeth Fifher; 
et allegavit confimiliter, et dicens prout fequitur. 
I. Quod praefatus Johannes Milton, dum vixit, 

mentis compos, ac in fua fana memoria exiftens, 

Teftamentum fuum nuncupativum modo in hoc ne- 
ojotio exhibitum .... tenoris fchedulae .... teftamen- 

o 

tariae condidit, nuncupavit, et declaravit; caeteraque 
omnia et fingula dedit, donavit, reliquit, et difpofuit, 
in omnibus, et per omnia, vel fimiliter in efYectum, 
prout in dicto Teftamento nuncupativo continetur, 
ac poftea mortem obiit : ac Principalis Pars ifta pro- 
ponit conjunctim, divifim, et de quolibet. II. Item, 
quod tempore conditionis, declarations, nuncupa- 
tionis Teftamenti, in hoc negotio exhibiti, praefatus 
Johannes Milton perfecta fruebatur memoria; ac 
proponit ut fupra g . 

been obligingly communicated to me by J. Nichols, Efq. from 
tin- original in his poflefllon : There were three widow Miltons 
there, (ut Nantwich) viz. the poet's widow, my aunt, and 
another. The poet's widow died lull fummer." Dated July 
so 1731. Todd.] 
* Regiftr. Cur. Pr»rog, Cant, ut lupr. 



WILL OF MILTON. 169 

II. 

Interrogatories addrefied to the TVitneJJes examined 
upon the Allegation. 

Decemb. 5, 1674. Interrogatoria miniftrata et 
miniftranda ex parte Annas, Marias, et Deboras 
Milton, teftibus ex parte Elizabethan Milton pro- 
duces five producendis fequuntur. 

Imprimis, Alke each witneffe, what relation to, 
or dependance on, the producent, they, or either 
of them, have; and to which of the parties they 
Wuld give the victory were it in their power ? Et in- 
terrogator quilibet teftis conjunctim, et diviiim, et de 
quolibet. 

2. Item, Alke each witneffe, what day, and what 
time of the day, the Will nuncupative was declared ; 
what pofitive words did the deceafed ufe in the de- 
claring thereof ? Can you poiitively fwear, that the de- 
ceafed did declare that hee did leave the refidue of 
his eftate to the difpofall of his wife, or did hee not 
not fay, "I will leave the refidue of my eftate to 
my wife ? Et fiat ut fupra. 

3. Item, Upon what occafion did the deceafed 
declare the faid Will? Was not the deceafed in 
perfect health at the fame time ? Doe you not think, 
that the deceafed, if he declared any fuch Will, de- 
clared it in a prefent paffion, or fome angry humour 
againft fome or one of his children by his former 
[firft] wife ? Et fiat ut fupra. 

4. Item, Alke each witneffe, whether the parties 
miniitrant were not and are not greate frequenters 
of the Church, k and good livers ; and what caule 

h Here feems to be an insinuation, that our poets's difpleafure 
againft thofe three daughters, arofe partly from their adherence 



170 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

of difpleafure had the deceafed againft them? Et 
Jiat ut fupra. 

5. Item, Aike Mr. [Chriftopher] Milton, and 
each other witnefle, whether the deceafed's Will, if 
any fuch was made, was not, that the deceafed's 
wife mould have £.1000, and the children of the 
faid Chriftopher Milton the refidue; and whether 
fhe hath not promifed him that they iliould have it, 
if Ihee prevailed in this Caufe? Whether the faid 
Mr. Milton hath not fince the deceafed's death 
confeiTed foe much, or fome part thereof? Et Jiat 
ut fupra. 

6. Item, Alke each witnefle, whether what is left 
to the miniftrants by the faid Will is not reputed a 
very bad or altogether defperate debt i ? Et Jiat ut 
fupra. 

to thofe principles ; which, in preference to his own, they had 
received, or rather inherited, from their mother's family, who 
were noted and active royalifts. Afterwards, the defcription 
good livers is not to be underftood in its general and proper fenfe, 
which could not have offended Milton; but as arifing from what 
went before, and meaning much the fame thing, that is, regular 
in their attendance on the ejlablijhed ivorjliip. 

1 That is, the marriage portion, promifed, but never paid, to 
John Milton, by Mr. Richard Powell, the father of his firft 
wife ; and which the faid John bequeathed to the daughters of 
that match, the miniftrants, Anne, Mary, and Deborah. They 
were married in 1643. I have now before me an original 
" Inventorie of the goods of Mr. Richard Powell of For- 
refthill, in the county of Oxon, taken the 10th of June, A. D. 
l6'4o\" This feems to have been taken in confcquence of a feizure 
of Mr. Powell's Iloufe by the rebels. His diuretics in the royal 
caui'e probably prevented the payment of his daughter's marriage 
portion. By the number, order, and furniture ot the rooms, he 
appears to have lived as a country gentleman, in a very extenuve 
and liberal ftyle of houfe-keeping. This I mention to confirm 



WILL OF MILTON. 174 

7. Aike the faid Mr. Milton, whether he did 
not gett the faid Will drawn upp, and inform the 
writer to what effect he ihould draw it? And did he 
not enquire of the other witneffes, what they would 
or could depofe ? And whether he hath not folicited 
this Caufe, and pay'd fees to the Proctour about it? 
Et fiat ut fupra. 

8. Item, Afke each witneffe, what fortune the de- 
ceafed did in his life-time beftowe on the miniftrants? 
And whether the faid Anne Milton is not lame, and 
almoft helpleffe ? k Et fiat ut fupra. 

9. Item, Aike each witneffe, what value is the 
deceafed's eftate of, as neare as they can guefs ? Et 
fiat ut fupra \ 

II. 

Depo/itions and crofs-examinations of the faid 
witneffes. 

Elizabetha Milton, Relicla et Legataria princi- 
palis Johannis Milton defun&i, contra Annam, 
Mariam, et Deboram Milton, filias ejufdem de- 

what is faid by Phillips, that Mr. Powell's daughter abruptly left 
her hufband within a month after their marriage, difgufted with 
his fpare diet and hard ftudy, " after having been ufed at home 
to a great houfe, and much company and joviality, &c." I have 
alfo feen in Mr. Powell's houfe at Forefthill many papers, which 
mow the active part he took in favour of the Royalifts : With 
fome others relating to the Rangerfhip of the Shotover foreft, 
bearing his fignature. 

k She was deformed, and had an impediment in her fpeech, 
His grand-daughter Elizabeth Foftcr by the third daughter 
Deborah, often fpoke of his harmnefs to his daughters, and that 
he refufed to have them taught to write. 

1 Regiftr. Cur. Praerog. Cant, ut fupr. 



172 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

functi. Super Allegatione articulata et Teftameiito 
nuncupativo Johannis Milton defuncti, ex parte 
Elizabethan Milton predictae, in hoc negotio, fe- 
cundo Andreas, 1 674, dato m et exhibitis. 

Quinto Decembris 1674. Chriftopherus Milton, 
villa; Gipwici in com. SufFolcias ortus infra parochiam 
Omnium San6torum Bredftreete, London, aetat. 58 
annor. aut eo circiter, teftis, &c. Ad omnes articulos 
di&ae Allegationis, et ad Teftamentum nuncupativum 
Johannis Milton, generofi, defuncti, in hoc ne- 
gotio dat. et exhibit, deponit et dicit, That on, or 
about the twentieth day of July, 1 674, the day cer- 
taine he now remembreth not, this deponent being a 
practicer in the Law, and a Bencher in the Inner 
Temple, but living in vacations at Ipfwich, did ufually 
at the end of the Terme vifit John Milton, his this 
deponent's brother the Teftator articulate, deceafed, 
before his going home ; and foe at the end of Mid- 
fummer Terme laft paft, he this deponent went to vifit 
his faid brother, and then found him in his chamber 
within his owne houfe, fcituate on Bunhill n within ths 

K Sic, ut et infra, pro Milton* 

n Sometimes called the Artillery-xcalk, leading to Bunhill 
fields. This was his laft fettled place of abode, and where he 
Jived longed. Richardfon calls this houfe a " fmall houfe, 
where he died about fourteen years after he was out of publick 
employ." Ubi fupr. p. xciii. It was here that he wrote or 
finifhed Paradift Lojl, Paradife Regained, and Sam/on Agonijles. 
13ut in l6'6"j, when the plague broke out in London, he retired 
to Chalfont Saint Giles, where his friend Elwood, a quaker, had 
taken a hottfe for him ; and the next year, whin the danger was 
over, he came back to Bunhill-iields. The houfe at Chalfont, 
in which he redded in this Ihort fpace of time, and where ha- 
planned or began Paradife Regained, is Hill Handing, fmall, but 



WILL OF MILTON. 173 

parim of S. Giles, Crepelgate, London : And at that 
tyme, he the laid Teftator, being not well, (and this de- 
ponent being then going into the country,) in a ferious 
manner, with an intent, (as he believes,) that what 
he then fpoke mould be his will, if he dyed before 
his this deponent's coming the next time to London, 
declared his Will in thefe very words as neare as this 
deponent cann now call to mynd. Viz. " Brother, 
the porcion due to me from Mr. Powell, my former 
[firft] wife's father, I leave to the unkind children I 
had by her : but I have receaved noe part of it, and 
my Will and meaning is, they mall have noe other 
benefit of my eftate, than the laid porcion and what 
I have befides don for them : they haveing been very 
undutifull to me. And all the refidue of my eftate I 
leave to the difpofall of Elizabeth my loveing wife." 
She, the faid Elizabeth his the deceafed's wife, and 
Elizabeth Fyiher his the deceafed's then maide-fer- 
vant, was [at the] fame tyme goeing upp and downe 
the roome, but whether me then heard the faid de- 
ceafed, fo declare his will as above or not, he knoweth 
not. 

pleafantly fituated. See Ellwood's Life of Himfelf, p. 246. 
Who calls it " a pretty box." 

[Mr. Dunfter, in the additions to his edition of Paradife Re- 
gained, remarks that the houfe is not pleafantly fituated. " The 
adjacent country is indeed extremely pleafant ; but the imme- 
diate fpot is as little picturefque or pleafing as can be well 
imagined. Immediately in front of the houfe, a grafs field rifes 
fo abruptly as completely to exclude all profpect: and the com- 
mon road of the village pafles by the gable end, adjoining to 
which is the end of a fmall dwelling, which runs behind that 
inhabited by Milton/' Toddu] 



174 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

And the faid teftator at the premifes was of perfect 
mind and memory and talked and difcourfed fenfibly 
and well, et aliter nefcit deponere. 

Chr. Milton* 

Ad Interrogators. 

Ad l** Interr. rejpondet, that the party producent 
in this caufe was and is the relicl; of the faid decafed, 
who was his this refpondent's brother; and the parties 
miniftring thefe interrogatories were and are in re- 
pute, and foe he beleeveth his the faid deceafed's 
children by a former wife : and for his part, he 
wilheth right to take place, and foe would give it if 
in his power ; and likewife wilheth that his brother's 
Will might take effect. 

Ad 2 m * Interr. refpondet, that on what day of the 
moneth or weeke the faid deceafed declared his Will, 
as is above depofed, he now remembreth not pre- 
cifely ; but well remembreth, that it was in a fore- 
noone, and on the very day he this deponent was 
goeing in the country in [the] Ipfwich coach, which 
goeth not out of towne till noone or thereabout : and 
he veryly beleeveth in his confcience, that the refidue 
of his eftate he did then difpofe of in thefe very 
words, viz. " And all the refidue of my eftate I leave 
to the difpofall of Elizabeth my loving wife ;" or he 
ufed words to the felfe fame effecl, et aliter referendo 
fe ad pre-depof. nefcit refpondere. 

Ad 3 m ' Interr. refpondet, that the faid deceafed was 
then ill of the goutc, and what he then f pake touching 
his Will was in a very calme manner ; only [he] com- 
plained, but without piifiion, that Ms children had 



WILL OF MILTON. 175 

been unkind to him, but that his wife had been very 
kind and careful of him ; and he believeth the only 
reafon induced the laid deceafed at that time to 
declare his Will was, that he this deponent might 
know it before his goeing into the country, et aliter 
refer endo fe ad pre-depojita nefcit re/ponder e. 

Ad 4 m * Inter r. re/pondet, that he knoweth not how 
the parties miniitring thefe interrogatories frequent 
the church, or in what manner of behaviour of life 
and converfacion they are of, they living apart from 
their father four or five yeares laft paft, and as 
touching his the deceafed's difpleafure with them, he 
only heard him fay at the tyme of declareing of his 
Will, that they were undutifull and unkind to him, 
not expreffing any particulars ; but in former tymes 
he hath herd him complaine, that they were carelefs 
of him being blind, and made nothing of deferteing 
him, et aliter nefcit refpondere. 

Ad 5 m ' Interr. refpondet, that fmce this refpon- 
dent's comeing to London this Michaelmas Terme 
laft pafte, this refpondent's filter, the party now pro- 
ducent in this caufe, told this reipondent, that the 
deceafed his brother did after his this refpondent's 
goeing into the country in Trinity vacacion laft fum- 
mer [fay,] that, if Ihe fhould have any overplus above 
a 1000/. come to her hands of his the deceafed's 
eftate, me fhould give the fame to this refpondent's 
children : but the deceafed himfelfe did not declare 
any fuch thing to this refpondent at the tyme of his 
declaring his Will, the tyme above depofed of. 

Ad 6 1 *' Interr. re/pondet, that he beleeveth that 
what is left to the parties miniftring thefe interroga- 
tories by the faicl deceafed's Will, is in the hands of 



176 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

perfons of ability abell to pay the fame, being their 
grandmother and uncle ; and he hath feen the grand- 
father's Will, wherein 'tis particularly dire£ted to be 
paid unto them by his executors, et allter nefcit rc- 
fpondere. 

Ad 7 m ' Interr. re/pondet, that he this refpondent 
did draw upp the very Will executed in this caufe, 
and write it with his owne hand, when he came to this 
court, about the 23d. of November laft paft, and at 
that tyme this refpondent did read the fame all over to 
Elizabeth Fifher, the faid deceafed's late maid fervant, 
and fhe faid me remembered the fame, and in con- 
firmation whereof let her marke thereto in manner 
as on the fame Will executed in this caufe is now to 
be feen. And this refpondent waited on the faid 
deceafed's widdow once at Doctor Exton's chambers 
about this fuite, at which tyme me wanted fome halfe 
crownes, and this refpondent lent her then two halfe 
crownes, but more he hath at noe tyme paid either 
to Doctor or Proctor in this caufe. 

Ad 8 m ' Interr. re/pondet, that he knowethof noe for- 
tune given by the faid deceafed to the parties miniftring 
thefe interrogatories, befides the portion which he was 
promifed with his former wife in marriage, being a 
10001. which is ftill unpaid befides the intereft thereof 
for about twenty yeares, faveing his charges in their 
maintenance and breeding, ct allter nefcit rejpondere, 
faveing that Anne Milton interr. is lame and helples. 

Ad ult. reddit caufas fcientise fuse ut fupra. 

Die prid. 

Repetit. cor. Doclore Cur. Milton* 

Lloyd Surrog. 



Milton con. Milton et Milton 
Thompfon. Clements. 



WILL OF MILTON. 177 

Sup. All nis - artic. et Tef- 
tamento nuncupativo 
Johan. Milton defuncti 
ex parte Elizabethan 
Milton in hujufmodi 
Caufa dat. et admifT. 
examinat. 

15°- Dec. 1674. 

Maria Fifher foluta famul. domeftica Johan. Batten 
habitan. in vieo vocat. Bricklane in Old Streete 
ubi moram fecit per Spacium fex hebdomadarum 
aut eo circiter, an tea cum Benj amino Whitcomb 
Mercatore habitan. in vico vocat. Coleman 
Streete London per Spacium 3m. Menfium, 
antea cum Guiddon Culcap infra locum vocat 
Smock Alley prope Spittlefields per Spacium 
unius anni, aut eo circiter, antea cum Johanne 
Fayley infra Oppidum Milton in Com. Stafford 
per Spacium duorum annorum, antea cum Jo- 
hanne Baddily infra parochiam de Milton praed. 
per Spacium trium annorum, et antea cum 
quodam Rogers Hargrave infra parochiam de 
Milton prajd. per Spacium duorum annorum 
aut eo circiter, orta infra parochiam de Norton 
in Com. Stafford prsed. setatis 23 aut eo circiter, 
teltis, &c. 

Ad omnes articulos di&ae All nis * et ad teftamentum 
nuncupativum Johan Milton teftatoris in hac caufa 
defuncti in hujufmodi neg 0, dat. et exhibit, deponit et 
dicit, that this deponent knew and was well ac- 

VOL. i* N 



178 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

quainted with the articulate John Milton the teftator 
in this caufe deceafed, for about a twelve moneth 
before his death, who dyed about a moneth fmce to 
the beft of this deponent's remembrance ; And faith, 
that on a day hapning about two moneths fince, as 
neare as this deponent can remember, this deponent 
being then in the kitchen of the houfe of the forefaid 
John Milton fcituate againft the Artillery Ground 
neare Bunhill Fields, and about noone of the fame 
day, the faid deceafed and the producent Elizabeth 
his wife being then at dinner in the faid kitchen, hee 
the faid deceafed amongft other difcourfe then had 
betweene him and his faid wife, did then fpeake ta 
his faid wife and utter thefe words, viz. " Make 
much of nice as long as I live, for thou knoweft I 
have given thee all when I dye at thy difpofal ;" there 
being then prefent in the faid kitchen this deponent's 
lifter and conteft ° namely Elizabeth Fyfher. And 
the faid deceafed was at that time of perfect mind 
and memory, and talked and difcourfed fenfibly and 
well, and was very merry, and feemed to be in good 
health of body, et aliter nefcit. 



Stenunx 

<3 



Marias Fisher 



AD INTERROGATORS. 

Ad primum Interr. re/pondet, that this refpondent 

hath noe relation or dependance on the producent 

ilton, that it is indifferent to this refpon- 

• i. e. Fellow-witneft, Con-Tcftis, 



WILL OF MILTON. 179 

dent which of the parties in this fuite obtaine, and 
would give the victory in this caufe if in her power 
to that party that hath moft right ; but which party 
hath moft right thereto this refpondent knoweth not, 
et aliter nefcit. 

Ad fecund urn Interr. re/pondet, that this refpon- 
dent doth not remember the day when the deceafed 
declared the words by her pre-depofed, but remem- 
breth that it was about noone of fuch day that the 
words which hee then declared were thefe, viz. 
" Make much of mee as long as I live, for thou 
knoweft I have given thee all when I dye at thy dif- 
pofall ;" then fpeaking to his wife Elizabeth Milton 
the party producent in this caufe, et aliter nefcit. 

Ad tertium Interr. refpo?idet, that the deceafed 
when hee declared the words pre-depofed, was then 
at dinner with his wife the party producent and 
was then very merry, and feemed to be in good 
health of body ; but upon what occafion hee fpoke 
the faid words fhee knoweth not, et aliter nefcit. 

Ad quartum Interr. refpondet, that this refpondent 
knoweth neither of the parties miniftrant in this 
caufe faving this refpondent once faw Anne Milton 
one of the miniftrants, et nefcit refpondere per parte 
fua. 

Ad quintum Interr. nefcit refpondere. 

Ad fextum Interr. nefcit refpondere. 

Ad feptimum Interr. non concemit earn, et nefcit 
refpondere. 

Ad octavum Interr. refpondet, that this refpon- 
dent once faw the Interr. Anne Milton but doth not 
remember whether iliee was lame or helplefle, et 
aliter nefcit % 

v 2 



380 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

Ad 9 m * Interr. refpondet, that this refpondent 
knoweth nothing of the deceafed's eftate or the value 
thereof, et aliter nefcit. 

Eodem Die Signum 

Repetit coram Do6tore Marine: Fisher, 

Digby Surro. &c. pnte 
Tho Welham, N. P. 



Eodem Die 

Elizabetha Fiflier famula Domeftica Elizabethan 
Milton ptis producentis in hac caufa cum qua 
et Johanne Milton ejus Marito defuncto vixit 
per Spacium 13 Meniium, antea cum quodam 
Thoma Adams apud Eagnall in Com. Stafford 
per Spacium trium annorum et fex Menfium, 
antea cum W m0, Bourne Gen. infra parochiam 
de Woolftilftan in Com. Stafford praed. per 
Spacium duorum annorum, orta infra parochiam 
de Norton in Com. praed. aetatis 28 annorum 
aut eo circiter, teftis, &c. 

Ad omnes articulos dictse All ni3, et ad teft amentum 
nuncupativum Johan. Milton teftatoris in hac caufa 
defuncli in hujufmodi negotio dat. exhibit et admhT. 
dcponit et dick, that this deponent was fervant unto 
3\lr. John Milton the teftator in this caufe deceafed 
for about a yeare before his death, who died upon a 
Sunday the * fifteenth of November laft at night, 

* [She appears to have been miftuken, a fingle week, in her 
depofition. bee the Life, p. 125, 120'. Todd.]. 



WILL OF MILTON. 181 

And faith that on a day hapning in the month of 
July laft, the time more certainly me remembereth 
not, this deponent being then in the deceafed's lodging 
chamber, hee the faid deceafed, and the party pro 
ducent in this caufe his wife, being then alfoe in the 
faid chamber at dinner together, and the faid Eliza- 
beth Milton the party producent having provided 
fomething for the deceafed's dinner which hee very well 
liked, p hee the faid deceafed then fpoke to his faid 
wife thefe or the like words as neare as this deponent 
can remember, viz. " God have mercy Betty, I fee 
thou wilt performe according to thy promife in pro- 
viding mee fuch dimes as I think fitt whilft I live, 
and when I dye thou knoweft that I have left thee 
all," there being noebody prefent in the faid chamber 
with the faid deceafed and his wife but this deponent : 
And the faid teftator at that time was of perfect mind 
and memory, and talked and difcourfed fenfibly and 
well, but was then indifpofed in his body by reafon 
of the diftemper of the gout, which hee had then 
upon him. Further this deponent faith, that fhee 
hath fevrall times heard the faid deceafed, fince the 
time above depofed of, declare and fay, that hee had 
made provifion for his children in his life-time, and 
had fpent the greateft part of his eftate in providing 
for them, and that hee was refolved hee would doe 
noe more for them living or dyeing, for that little part 
which hee had left hee had given to his wife the arti- 
culate Elizabeth the producent, or he ufed words to 
that effect. And likewife told this deponent, that 

p His grand-daughter Elizabeth Fofter, by his third daughter 
Deborah, ufed to lay, that he was delicate, but temperate in 
his diet. 



182 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

there was a thoufand pounds left in Mr. Powell's 
hands to be difpofed amongft his children hereafter. 
By all which words this refpondent verily beleeveth 
that the faid teftator had given all his eftate to the 
articulate Elizabeth his wife, and that fhee fhould 
have the fame after his deceafe, et aliter nefcit re- 
fpondere, faving that the faid deceafed was at the 
feveral times of declaring the words laft pre-depofed 
alfoe of perfect mind and memory. 

Signum 

Elizab. Fisher. 



Ad Interrogators. 

Ad primum Interr. refpondct, that this refpondent 

was fervant to the deceafed in his life time and is 

now fervant to tiie producent and therefore hath a 

dependency upon her as her fervant, that if the 

ory were in this respondent's power fhee would 

the deceafed's eftate equally to be fhared be- 

ie the miniftrants and the producent, et aliter 

nefcit. 

Ad fecundum Interr. re/pondet, that this refpon- 
d< lit doth not remember on what day the deceafed 
declared the words fifft by her afore depofed, but it 
u as about noone of fuch day when he was at dinner 
that the precife words as neare as this refpondent; 
can remember which the deceafed ufed at that time 
nrer^ thefe, viz. " God have mercy Betty (fpeaking 
to Ills wife Elizabeth Milton for foe hee ufually called 
her) I fee thou wilt perfonnc according to thy pro- 
mife in providing mec fuch dilhes as I think fitt 



WILL OF MILTON. 183 

whilft I live, and when I dye thou knoweft that I 
have left thee all," et aliter nefcit ; faving that this 
refpondent well remembreth that the deceafed de- 
clared the words lait by her depoled to the articles 
of the allegation to this refpondent once on a Sunday 
in the afternoone, but on what day of the month or 
in what month the laid Sunday then happened this 
refpondent doth not remember. 

Ad tertium Interr. refpondct, that the occafion of 
the deceafed's fpeaking of the words depoled by this 
refpondent in her anfwer to the next precedent inter- 
rogatory was upon the producent's provideing the 
deceafed fuch victuals for his dinner as hee liked, 
and that he was then indifferent well in health, faving 
that fome time he was troubled with the paine of the 
gout, and that hee was at that time very merry and 
not in any paffion or angry humour, neither at that 
time fpoke any thing againft any of his children that 
this refpondent heard of, et aliter nefcit. 

Ad quartum Interr. refpondet, that this refpondent 
hath heard the deceafed declare his difpleafure againft 
the parties miniftrant his children, and particularly 
the deceafed declared to this refpondent that, a little 
before hee was marryed to Elizabeth Milton his now 
relict, a former maid fervant of his told Mary one of 
the deceafed's daughters and one of the miniftrants, 
that iliee heard the deceafed was to be marryed, to 
which the faid Mary replyed to the faid maid fervant, 
that that was noe news to heare of his wedding, but 
if ihee could heare of his death that was fomething : 
and further told this refpondent, that all his faid 
children did combine together and counfel his maid 
fervant to cheat him the deceafed in her marketings, 



164 THE NUNCUPATIVE 

and that his faid children had made away ibme of 
his bookes and Mould have fold the reft of his bookes 
to the dunghill women; or hee the faid deceafed 
fpoke words to this refpondent to the felfe fame effecl; 
and purpofe : that this refpondent knoweth not what 
frequenters of the church, or what good livers, the 
parties miniftrant or either of them are, et alitor 
nefclt. 

Ad quintum Interr. rejpondet, that this refpondent 
doth not know that the deceafed's wife was to have 
1000/. and the interrogative children of Chriftopher 
Milton the refidue, nor doth this refpondent know 
that the faid Elizabeth, the deceafed's wife, hath 
promifed the interrogative Chriftopher Milton or his 
children any fuch thing in cafe fhee ihould prevaile 
in this caufe ; that the faid Mrs. Milton never con- 
ferred foe much in this refpondent's hearing, or to 
any body elfe that this refpondent knoweth of, et 
aliter nefclt. 

Ad fextum Interr. refpondet, that this refpondent 
believeth that what is left the deceafed's children in 
the Will nuncupative in this caufe executed and 
meneioned therein to be due from Mr. Powell, is a 
good debt ; for that the faid Mr. Powell is reputed 
a rich man, et aliter ??efclt. 

Ad feptimum Interr. refpondet, that this refpon- 
dent did voluntarily tell the interrogative Mrs. Milton, 
what (hee heard the deceafed fay which was to the 
effect by her pre-depofed, et aliter nefclt. 

Ad oelavuni Interr. refpondet \ that this refpondent 
knoweth not what the deceafed did in his life time 
beftow on the ininiiirants his children, and that the 
interrogative Anne Milton is lame, but hath a trade 



WILL OF MILTON. 



185 



and can live by the fame, which is the making of 
gold and filver lace and which the decealed bred her 
up to, et aliter nefcit. 

Ad nonum Interr. re/pondet, that this refpondent 
knoweth not the deceafed's eftate, or the value 
thereof, et aliter nefcit. 



Eodem Die 
Repetit coram Docfcore 

Trumbull Surro. &c. 
Tho. Welham, N. P % 

JAMES TOWNLEY, 
GEORGE GOSLING 
ROBERT DODWELL 



Signum 
Elizabeths Fi'sher. 



j 



Deputy Registers, 



i Cur. Praerog, Cant. ut fupra, 



186 



THE NUNCUPATIVE 



IV. 

Grant of Letters of Adminiftration to the widow 
Elizabeth r . 

Die 25 t0 * Februarii 167$. 

JOHANNES MILTON. Vicefifno 
quinto Die Februarii ema- 
navit Commiffio Elizabethae 
Milton Relictae Johannis 
Milton nuper Parochiae ult. Julii; 
Sancti Egidii Cripplegate in 
Com. Mid. Defun&i hentis, 
&c. ad Adminiftrand. bona, 
jura, et credita dicti defuncli, 
de bene &c. jurat, Tefta- 
mento Nuncupativo diet de- 
functi : aliter per antediclam ult. Dec, 
Elizabethan! Milton Alle- 
gata, nondum Probato. 

GEORGE GOSTLING,7 

JAMES TOWNLEY, V Deputy Registers. 

ROBERT DODWELL, \ 



> 



* The reader will compare thefe evidences with the printed 
accounts of Milton's biographers on this fubject; who fay, that 
be fold his library before his death, and left his family fifteen 
hundred pounds, which bis widow Elizabeth feized, and only 
gave one hundred pounds to each of his three daughters. Of 
this widow, Phillips relates, rather lafhly, that (he persecuted 
his children in his life time, and cheated them at his death. 

Milton had children, who furvived him, only by his firft wife, 
the three daughters fo after named. Gf thefe, Anne, the firft, dc< 



WILL OF MILTON. 187 

formed in ftature, but with a handfome face, married a matter 
Guilder, and died of her firft childbirth, with the infant. Mary, 
ihe fecond, died fingle. Deborah, the third, and the greater!; fa- 
vourite of the three, went over to Ireland as companion to a lady 
in her father's life-time ; and afterwards married Abraham Clarke, 
a weaver in Spital-fields, and died, aged feventy-fix in Auguft 
1727. This is the daughter that ufed to read to her father; and 
.was well known to Richardfon, and Profeffor Ward : a woman 
of a very cultivated understanding, and not inelegant of manners, 
She was generoufly patronifed by Addifon ; and by queen Caro- 
line, who fent her a prefent of fifty guineas. She had feven fons 
and three daughters, of whom only Caleb and Elizabeth are re- 
membered, Caleb migrated to Fort Saint George, where perhaps 
he died. Elizabeth, the youngeft daughter, married Thomas 
Fofter a weaver in Spittle-fields, and had feven children, who all 
died. She is faid to have been a plain fenfible woman; and kept 
a petty grocer's or chandler's fhop, firft at lower Holloway, and 
afterwards in Cock-lane near Shoreditch church. In April, 1750, 
Comus was acted for her benefit: Doctor Johnfon, who wrote the 
Prologue, fays, " ihe had fo little acquaintance with diverfion 
or gaiety, that fhe did not know what was intended when a be- 
nefit was offered her/' The profits of the performance were only 
one hundred and thirty pounds * ; although Doctor Newton con- 
tributed largely, and twenty pounds were given by Jacob Tonfon 
the bookfeller. On this trifling augmentation to their fmall ftock, 
fhe and her hufband removed to Iflington, where they both foon 
died. So much greater is our tafte, our charity, and general na- 
tional liberality, at the diftance of forty years, that I will ven- 
ture to pronounce, that, in the prefent day, a benefit at one of our 
theatres for the relief of a poor and an infirm grand-daughter of 
the author of Comus and Paradife Loft, would have been much 
more amply and worthily fupported. 

These feem to have been the grounds, upon which Milton's 
Nuncupative Will was pronounced invalid. Firft, there was 
wanting what the Civil Law terms a rogatio teflium, or a folemn 
bidding of the perfons prefent, to take notice that the words he 
was going to deliver were to be his Will. The Civil Law re- 

f* From the information of my friend, Ifaac Reed, Efq., I am enabled to 
add, to Mr. Warton's account, that the Receipts of the Houfe wer« 
W7\. 14s, 6d, from which the Expeaces deducted we 801. Todd.] 



188 THE NUNCUPATIVE, kc. 

quires this form, to make men's verbal declarations operate a* 
Wills; otherwife, they are prefumed to be words of common 
calling or loofe conversation. And the Statute of the twenty- 
ninth of Charles the Second [c. iii.] has adopted this Rule ; as 
may be feen in the 19th claufe of that Statute, ufually called the 
Statute of Frauds, which palled in the year 1676, two years after 
Milton's death. Secondly, the words, here attefted by the three 
witnefies, are not words delivered at the fame time; but one wifc- 
nefs fpeaks to one declaration made at one time, and another to 
another declaration made at another time. And although the de- 
clarations are of fimilar import, this circumftance will not fatisfy 
the demands of the Law; which requires, that the three witneffes 
who are to fupport a Nuncupative Will, rauft fpeak to the iden- 
tical words uttered at one and the fame time. There is yet ano- 
ther requifite in Nuncupative Wills, which is not found here; 
namely, that the words be delivered in the laft ficknefs of a party : 
whereas the words here attefted appear to have been delivered 
when the party was in a tolerable ftate of health, at leaft under 
no immediate danger of death. On thefe principles we may pre- 
fume Sir Leoline Jenkins to have acted in the reje6tion of Mil- 
ton's Will: although tr.e three wilncfies apparently told the 
truth in what they depofed. The Judge, deciding againft the 
Will, of courfe decreed adminiftration of the Inteftate's effects 
to the widow. 

For an inveftigation of thefe papers Hn the Prerogative Re- 
giftry,for an explanation of their nature and purport, and of other 
technical difficulties which they prefent to one unacquainted with 
the records and more ancient practice of the prerogative court in 
teftamentary proceedings, I muft confefs myfelf indebted to the 
kind attention and friendfhip of Sir William Scott. There 
are other papers in the Commons belonging to this bufinefs: but 
as tli<y are mere forms of law, as they throw no new light on the 
caufc, and furnifli no anecdotes of Milton and hi* family, they 
arc here omitted. T. Warton. 



A List of fitch Editions of Miltoris Poetical 
Works as have hitherto been met with by the 
editor of fhefe volumes. 

I. A Mafke prefented at Ludlow Caftle, 1634, &c. Printed 
for H. Robinfon, 1637. 4°. This is Lawes's edition of 
Comus. 

II. Lycidas, in the Cambridge Verfes, 1638. 4to. 

ill. Poems by Mr. John Milton, both Englifh and Latin, 
compofed at feveral times. Printed by his true copies. 
The Songs were fet in mufick by Mr. Henry Lawes, 
gentleman of the King's Chappel,&c. Printed and publiflied 
according to order. London, Printed by Ruth Raworth 
for Humphrey Mofeley, &c. 1645. fmall 8°. with his 
portrait by Marfhall. 
iv. The Sonnet to Henry Lawes, prefixed to Choice Pfalms 
put into mufick by H. and W. Lawes. Printed for H. 
Mofeley, 1648. 4°. 
v. Paradife Loft, a Poem written in ten books, by John 
Milton. Licenfed and Entred according to order. London, 
Printed and are to be fold by Peter Parker under Creed 
Church near Aldgate ; And by Robert Boulter at the Turks 
Head in Bifhopfgate-ftreet ; and Matthias Walker under 
St. Dunftons Church in Fleet-ftreet. 1667. 4°. This is 
the jirft title page of the fitji edition. The poem imme- 
diately follows the title-page, without any arguments or 
lift of errata. 

2d Title-page, Sec. Paradife Loft, a Poem in ten books. 
The Author J. M. Licenfed and Entred according to order. 
London, Printed and are to be fold by Peter Parker, &c. 
[as before] 1668. 

3d Title-page, &c. Paradife Loft, a Poem in ten books. 
The Author John Milton. London, Printed by S. Simmons, 
and to be fold by S. Thomfon at the Biihops-head in Duck- 
lane, H. Mortlack at the White Hart in Weftminfter-Hall, 
M. Walker under St, Dunftans Church in Fleet-ftreet, and 



190 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

R. Boulter at the Turks-Head in Bifhopfgate-ftreet, 166S. 
To thefe titles of 1668, the addrefs of The Printer to the 
Reader, and the Arguments of each book, immediately fac- 
ceed. A table of errata alfo precedes the poem. 

4th Title-page, &c. Paradife Loft, a Poem in ten books. 
The Author John Milton. London, Printed by S. Simmons, 
and are to be fold by T. Helder at the Angel in Little Britain. 
1669. With the addrefs of The Printer to the Reader P 
and the Arguments. 

5th Title-page, &c. Paradife Loft, a Poem in ten books. 
The Author John Milton. London, Printed by S. Simmons 
&c. [as before] 1669, but without the fubfequent addrefs of 
The Printer to the Reader, yet not without the Argu- 
ments ; which appear to have been reprinted, as the two laft 
leaves of the poem feem alfo to have been, in this fifth typo- 
graphical alteration. 

Of this edition fome errata appear to have been correfterf 
in fome ihects while they were palling through the prefs. J 
will mention an inftance or two. Mr. Lofft obferves, that 
the 257th line of the fifth book " begins a new paragraph 
in his copy of 1667, and that of 1669, and has no comma 
after cloud: but in that of 1668 it continues unbroken ; and 
has a comma after cloud."— \ have two copies of 1668, one 
of which, (in its original binding,) begins a paragraph with 
this verfe, and has no comma after cloud. The other agrees 
with Mr. Lofft's ftatement. Again, the lift of errata to my 
copy of 1668 directs in to be fubftituted for with, in the 
penultimate line of the third book : In is printed in both my 
copies of 1668. I have a copy of 1669 in which with re- 
mains, la the copies of l66'8 and 1G69 the number of this 
verfe alfo differs. Several variations of this kind might be 
pointed out. Perhaps fome leaves were cancelled. 
v vi. Paradife Regained, a Poem in IV books. To which i? 

added Sam ion Agoniftes. The Author John Milton. 

London, Printed by J. M. for John Starkey, &c, 

1671. Svo. 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 191 

Til. Poems, 8tc. Upon feveral Occafions. By Mr. John 
Milton : Both Engliih and Latin, &c. Compofed at feveral 
times. With a fmall Tractate of Education to Mr. Hartlib. 
London, Printed for Tho. Dring &c. 1673. fmall 8vo. To 
the Engliih poems in this edition were firft added, i. Ode 
on the death of a fair infant, ii. At a Vacation Exercife in 
the College, iii. On the new forces of confcience under 
the Long Parliament, iv. Horace to Pyrrha. v. Nine 
Sonnets, vi. All the Engliih Pfalms. To the Latin poems, 
i. Apologus de Ruftico et Hero. ii. Ad Joannem Rou- 
fmm, &c. In this edition the epiftle from Sir Henry 
Wotton is omitted. 
a viii. Paradife Loft, a Poem in twelve books. The Author 
John Milton. The Second Edition, Revifed and Aug- 
mented by the fame Author. London, Printed by S. Sim- 
mons, &c. 1674. fmall 8vo. With his portrait by Dolle, 
and with the commendatory verfes of Barrow and Marvell. 
In the Advertisement to the Glafgow editions of the firft 
book of Paradife Loft in quarto, and of the whole poem 
in octavo, both printed in 1750, an edition of 1672 is 
mentioned as the ftandard edition, of which the text is in 
thefe editions adopted. After a very extenfive and diligent 
inquiry, I have been unable, however, to meet with any 
copy bearing the date of 1672. 

* ix. Paradife Loft, &c. 3d Edition. 1678. fmall 8vo. 
x. Par. Regained and Samfon &c. 1680. 8vo. 

XL. Par. Loft, 4th Edition. With his portrait by White, 
and other plates. Publiihed by fubfcription. Lond, 
Printed by Miles Flelher for Richard Bentley, &c. 1688. 
Fol. To this edition the two following poems are ufually, 
but not always, found adjoined. 

* xn. Par. Regained, Lond. Printed by R. E. and fold by 

Randal Taylor. 16S8. Fol. 
'' xiii. Samfon Agoniftes, Lond. Printed and fold by Randal 
Taylor. 1688. Fol. 
xi v. Paradife Loft and^ Regained, with cuts. London. 
1692. Fol. 1 



192 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

xv. Paradife Loll. Loud. 1695. Fol. With Notes bf 
P. Hume, and with a Table of the moft remarkable parts 
of the poem, under the three heads of Defcriptions, Si- 
milies, and Speeches. 

xvi. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, were 
alfo printed, in folio for Tonfon, in 1 695, and are moft 
frequently found united with the Par. Loft of the fame year. 

xvii. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols. large 8vo. London. 
Printed for Tonfon, 1705. 

xviii. The fame, 2 vols. 8vo. 1707. 

xix. Paradife Loft, for Tonfon, 12mo. 1711. This edi- 
tion is much efteemed. Tickell feems to have printed his 
edition from it. To this edition is added the index of the 
principal matters, which Dr. Newton fuppofed to have 
been firft inferted in Tickell's edition. 

xx. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, Lond.. 
for Tonfon, 1713. 12mo. This edition is alfo valuable. 
It rectifies feveral errours of the text in the handfome, but 
incorrect, editions of 1705 and 1707. 

This edition appeared with another bookfeller's name 
(W. Taylor) in the general title-page, and with the date 
of 1721 : But in the fepar ate titles of Samfon, and the 
Poems, the true date remains. It is uilqueftionably the 
edition of 1713 with a new title-page. 

xxi. Paradife Loft, with Plates. Lond. 1719- 12mo. 

XXii. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols. 4to. for Tonfon, 1720. 
With Mr. Addifon's Criticifm on the Par. Loft, and an 
Index of the principal matters. This is Tickell's edition. 
It is fplendidly printed. A lift of more than 300 fub- 
fcribers is prefixed to it. 

XXii i. The fume, in 2 vols. 12mo. With Mr. Addifon's 
Criticifm. 1721. 

xxiv. Paradife Loft, Svo. Dublin, for G. Grierfon, 1724. 

xxv. Paradife Loft, to which is prefixed an Account of the 
life of Milton, 8vo. Lond. 1725. Fenton's edition. 

Xxvi. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, under 
the care alio of Fenton, Bvo. 17-3, 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 193 

Jtxvu. The Poetical Works, 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1727. 
Fenton's. 

xxviii. The fame, 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1730. Fenton's. 

xxix. The fame, with Mr. Addifon's Criticifm, 2 vols. 
12mo. Lond. 1731. 

xxx. Paradife Loft, 4to. 1732. Bentley's edition. 

xxxi. Paradife Loft, 8vo. Lond. 1737. 

xxx 1 1. The fame, 8vo. Lond. 1738. 

xxxin. The fame, with Mr. Addifon's Criticifm, 8vo. 
Lond. 1739- 

XXXIV. Paradife Loft, 8vo. Tonfon. Lond. 1741. 

xxxv. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, 
beautifully printed, and on a fine paper, large 8vo. Lond. 
1742. 

xxxvi. Paradife Lofty 8vo. Lond. 1746. 

xxxvii. Paradife Loft, in 2 vols. 12mo. Lond. For Tonfon, 
1746. 

xxxviii. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, 
in 2 vols* 12mo. Lond. For Tonfon, 1747. This and 
the preceding edition are printed with great corre6lnefs. 

xxxix. Paradife Loft, compared with the authentick edi- 
tions, and revifed by John Hawkey, editor of the Latin 
Clafficks. Dublin, printed by S. Powell for the editor. 
1747, large 8vo. This edition, and the edition of Para- 
dife Regained by the fame perfon, are very handfomely 
printed, and are highly to be valued for their accuracy. 
They are now extremely fcarce. 

xl. Paradife Loft, 4to. Dublin, 1747. 

xli. The fame, "printed on Irifli Paper," 8vo. Dublin, 
1748. 

xlii. Samfon, Poems upon feveral occafions, and Comus, 
8vo. Dublin, 1748. 

xli ii. Paradife Loft, with Notes of Various Authors, by 
Dr. Newton, in 2 vols. 4to. Lond. 1749. 

xliv. Paradife Loft, Book the firft. 4to. Glafgow, 1750. 
With Notes : in which <f are illuftrated the various allu- 
fions to ancient mythology, fucred and profane, which are 

VOL. I. O 



194 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

fo frequent in the iirft book of this divine poem. Many 
paffages too of the ancient poets are there remarked, of 
which Milton has fo admirably availed himfelf, or, to lay 
it more properly, which he has fo thoroughly made his 
own." Advert) fement. This excellent publication has 
been attributed by fome to Dr. Gillies, by others (more 
juitly) to Mr. Callander. See the Preface to this edition. 

xlv. Paradife Loft, in twelve books. 8vo. Glafgow, 1750. 
I xlvi. Paradife Loft, 2 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1750. Newton's 
edition. 

xlv ii. Paradife -Loft, in 2 vols, fmall 8vo. With Notes. 
In John Marchant, Gent. Lond. 1751. 

xlviii. Paradife Loft, in 2 vols. 8 vo. Dublin, printed for 
J. Exiliaw. With Newton's Variorum Notes. 1751. 

* xlix. Paradife Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, 

with Notes of Various Authors, by Dr. Newton, in one 
vol. 4to. Lond. 1752. 

• l. The Poetical Works, 2 vols. 8vo. Dublin. 1752. 

Li. The fame, in 2 vols. 8vo. With a Gloffary. Edin- 
burgh. 1752. 

Li i. Paradife Regained. With the other Poetical Works, 
[fmaller Poems.] Compared with the beft editions, and 
revifed by John Hawkey, editor of the Latin Clafiicks. 
8vo. Dubl. 1752. 

Li ii. The fame, 18mo. Glafgow, 1752. 

Liv. The Poetical Works, 2 vols. 12mo. London, 1753. 

Lv. The Poetical Works, by Dr. Newton, in 4 vols, 8vo. 
Lond. 1753. 

lvi. The fame, in S vols. 4to. 1754. 

LVII. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols, fmall 8vo. With a 
Critique upon Paradife Loft by Mr. Addifon, and a Preface 
in which are hifei ted characters of the feveral pieces: With 
a Gloffary, and the Life of Milton. Edinburgh, 1755. 

lviii. The fame, 4 vols* Bvo. 1757. Newton's edit. 

i.ix. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols, large 8vo. Printed at 
Birmingham by Balkerville, in 1758. 

lx. The fame, by U.iikctville, in 2 vols. 4to. 1759* 



LIST OF EDITIONS, 395 

LXI. The fame, by Bafcerville, in 2 vols. 8vd. 1760. It is 
almoft fuperfluous to fay of Bafkerville's editions that they 
are beautifully printed. They are now become fcarce. 

Lxn. Paradife Loft, Lond. Printed for Griffiths, 3760, 
12mo. 

lxiii. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols. 12mo. Edinb. 1762. 

lxiv. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 8vo. 1763. Newton's edit. 

Lxv. Paradife Loft, edited by the famous John Wefley, M. A, 
and " curtailed of its fair proportion/' but with a very- 
good intention, for the following reafons. H Of all the 
poems which have hitherto appeared in the world, in what- 
ever age or nation, the preference has generally been given, 
by impartial judges, to Milton's Paradife Loft. But this 
inimitable work, amidft all its beauties, is unintelligible to 
abundance of readers : The immenfe learning, which he 
has every where crowded together, making it quite obfcure 
to perfons of a common education. 

iC This difficulty, almoft infuperable as it appears, \ 
have endeavoured to remove in the following Extract : 
Firft, By omitting thofe lines, which I defpaired of ex- 
plaining to the unlearned, without uling abundance of 
words : And, Secondly, by adding fhort and eafy notes, 
fuch as I truft will make the main of this excellent poem 
clear, and intelligible, to any uneducated perfon of a toler- 
able underftanding." To the Reader. 1763. 12mo. 

ixvi. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 8vo, Lond. 1766. 
Newton's edit. 

lxvii. Paradife Loft, with Notes of various Authors, by 
John Rice, 8vo. Lond. 1766. 

lxviii. The Poetical Works, in 2 vols. 12mo. Edinb. 1767. 

lxix. The fame, 4 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1770. Newton's edit, 

lxx. Paradife Loft, folio. Glafgow. 1770. 

Lxxi. Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond. 1770. 

lxxii. Par. Regained, Samfon, &c. 12mo. Edinb. 3770, 

lxxiii. The Poetical Works, with a Life, and a Gloflary, 
in 2 vols, finall 8vo. Edinb. 1772. 

j-xxiv. The firft fix books of Paradife Loft, rendered into 

Q 2 



196 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

grammatical conftru6tion : the words of the text being' 
arranged, at the bottom of each page, in the lame natural 
order with the conceptions of the mind ; and the ellipiis 
properly fupplied, without any alteration in the diction of 
the poem. With Notes, &c. By the late James Bu- 
chanan, Author of the Britifli Grammar, &c. The ma- 
nufcript was left with Dr. James Robertfon, Profeffor of 
Hebrew, who has publiftied it for the benefit of Mr. Bu- 
chanan^ widow. 8vo. Edinburgh. 1773. 

lxxv. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1773. 
Newton's edit. 

lxxvi. The fame, 4 vols. 12mo. Lond. 1773. 

lxxv ii. Par. Regained, Samfon, &c. 12mo. Lond. 1773. 

Lxxvm. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 12mo. Edinb. 1773. 

lxxix. Paradife Loft, and Paradife Regained, in 2 vols. 
fmall 8vo. with Notes, tranflated from the French of the 
learned Raymond de St. Maui* : and various critical re- 
marks from Mr. Addifon, Dr. Warburton, Dr. Newton, 
Dr. Pearce, Dr. Bentley, Mr. Richardfon, and Mr. Hume. 
A new edition. Lond. 177o. 

lxxx. The fame, 3 vols. 4to. Lond. 1775. Newton's edit. 

lxxxi. The fame, 4 vols. 12mo. London, printed for Bell. 
1776. 

lxxx ii. Paradife Loft, 18mo. Glafgow, Foulis. 1776. 

lxxxiii. The fame, 12mo. Lond. 1778. 

lxxxi v. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1778. 
Newton's edit. 

lxxxv. The Poetical W r orks, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond. 1778. 

lxxx vi. The Poetical Works, in Johnfon's edit, of the 
Poets of Or. Brit. 3 vols, fmall 8vo. 1779. 

lxxxvii. The fame, 2 vols. 12mo. Edinb. 1779- 

lx xxviii. The fame, 3 vols. ISmo. Lond. Printed for 
Wenman, 1781. 

lxxx ix. Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond. 1784. 

x«\ Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond. 1784. 

XCI. Poems, 8cc. viz. Lycidas, L'Allegro, II Penferofo, 
Arcades, Comus, Odes, Sonnets, Mifcelkuues, Englifli 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 197 

Pfalms, Elegiarum Liber, Epigrammatum Liber, Silvarum 
Liber. With Notes critical and explanatory, and other 
Illuftrations. By Thomas Warton, Fellow of Trinity 
College, and late Profeffor of Poetry at Oxford. Svo. 
London. 1785. 

' xcn. The Poetical Works, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond. 1785. 
xciii. Paradife Regained, 12mo. Lond. 3785. 
xciv. Paradife Loll, iiluftrated with Texts of Scripture, by 
John Gillies, D. D. One of the Minifters in Glafgow. 
Small Svo. Lond. 1788. 
Xcv. The Poetical Works, 4 vols. 12mo. Lond. 1788. 
Bell. 

> xcvi. Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond. Vernor. 1789. 

t xcvu. The fame, 2 vols. 18mo. Lond. 1790. 

v xcviii. The fame, 4 vols. 8vo. Lond. 1790. Newton's. 

* xcix. Poems, &c. viz. Lycidas, [as before] the fecond 

edition by Mr. Warton, with many alterations and large 

additions. 8vo. Lond. 1791. 
' c. Paradife Loft, printed from the firft and fecond editions' 

collated. The original fyftem of orthography reftored ; 

the punctuation corrected and extended. With Various 

Readings: And Notes; chiefly rhythmical. By Capel 

Lofft, Efq; Book the firft. Bury St. Edmund's. 1792. 

Small quarto, of nearly the fame lize as the firft edition. 

A learned Preface, and an Appendix, are prefixed to this 

book. The fecond Book has been alfo publiihed. 
4 ci. Paradife Loft, 2d edit, by Dr. Gillies, with additions. 

Small Svo. Lond. 1793. 
*'cii. Paradife Regained, 12mo. Alnwick. 1793. 

* cm. The Poetical Works, 2 vols. 12mo. Lond. 1794. 

Wilkin. 
' civ. The fame, 3 vols. 12mo. with Tonfons Text of 1711, 

&c. Newton's Notes. 1795. 
cv. Paradife Regained. With Notes of Various Authors. 

By Charles Dunfter, M. A. 4to. Lond. 1795. 
evi. The Poetical Works, in Dr. Anderfon's Britilh Poets, 

royal 8vo Lond. 1795. 



198 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

tvn. The fame, in Cooke's Select Britifli Poets, with a Life 
of Milton, and Mr. Addison's Criticifm on the Par. Loit, 
4 vols. ICmo. 1795. 

t viii. The fame, in 2 vols. 8vo. elegantly printed by Bender. 
Lond. 1796. 

cix. Par. Regained, Samfon, and the Smaller Poems, with 
felect Notes from Dr. Newton's, and Mr. Dunfter's edi- 
tions. Lond. 8vo. 1797. 
' Cx. The Poetical Works, with an excellent Life of the 
Author, by William Hayley, Efq. In three folio volumes. 
Boydel and Nicol. 1794 — 1797. This magnificent edi- 
tion does honour to the tafte and abilities of thofe who 
were engaged in the production of it. It difplays every 
elegance of typographical execution ; and is accompanied 
with molt beautiful Engravings from the defigns of 
Weftall. It is a monument indeed worthy of him, whofe 
works entitle him to that fupereminence among the poets 
of his country, which he has fo happily afligned to his 
own glorious " Ifle" among the " fea-girt" domains of 
Neptune, in his Comus, ver. £8. 

" The greatest and the best of all the main." 

Cxi. Comus, A Ma(k, &c. With Notes critical and expla- 
natory by various commentators, and with preliminary 
illuflrations. To which is added a copy of the Mafk 
from a Manufcript belonging to his Grace the Duke of 
Jjridgcwater. By the editor of thefe volumes. 8vo. Can- 
terbury, 1798. 

Cxi 1. Comus, A Mafk, &c. To which are added L' Allegro 
and 11 Pctlferofo, and Mr. Warton's Account of the Origin 
ot Comus, [and the Account of Ludlow Caftle, with 
fome criticifms on the poem, taken from the preceding 
rdit ion.] Lond. fmall 8vo. 1799- 

(•xiil. Paradife Loft, beautifully printed, with plates by 
Richter, 4to. Ldnfl. 1799- 

iy. Paradife Loft, td which is prefixed the celebrated 
Critique by Samuel .Johnfon, LL.D. with a Sketch of the 
1 jfe and Writings of M ilton, by the Rev. John Evans, A. M. 
And with Engravings, royal 8vo. Lond. 1799- 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 199 

cxv. The Poetical Works, in 4 vols. With a Critical EiTay, 

by J. Aikin, M.D. fmall 8vo. Loud. 1801. 
cxvi. The Poetical Works, in 6 vols. With the principal 

Notes of various commentators. To which are added 

Illuftrations, with fome account of the Life of Milton, by 

the Rev. Henry J. Todd, M. A. (the prefent editor.) Svo. 

Lond. 180J . 
cxvit. Paradife Loft, 2 vols. 8vo. beautifully printed by 

Benfley, and embeliiihed with fine engravings. Duroveray. 

Lond. 1802. 
ex viii. Paradife Loft, Svo. with Heptinftaii's plates. 

Vernor, &c. Lond. 1802. 
cxix. The fame, in one vol. 18mo. Mawman, &c. 1804. 
cxx. Paradife Loft. Illuftrated with Texts of Scripture, 

by Dr. Gillies, 3d edition, 12mo. Mawman, &c. 1804. 
cxxi. Paradife Loft, Svo. Vernor, &c. Lond. 1804. 
cxx 11. Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond. 1805. 
cxxin. Poetical Works, (in Johnfon's edition of the Britifli 

Poets,) with new Biographical and Critical Matter, by 

J. Aikin, M.D. 3 vols. Svo. Kearfley. Lond. 1805. 
cxxiv. The fame, in 3 vols. ISmo. Kearfley. Lond. 1805. 
exxv. Poetical Works, by Thomas Park, 4 vols. 18mo. 

with beautiful engravings. Sharpe. Lond. 1805. 
cxxvi. The fame, in 2 vols. 32mo. Suttaby. Lond. 1806. 
cxx vi 1. Poetical Works, (in Johnfon's edition of the Britifli 

Poets,) 4 vols. 24mo. Bagfter, &c. Lond. 1807. 
cxlxviii. Paradife Loft, with Johnfon's Critique and Life of 

Milton, 12mo. Lond. Tegg. 1807. 
ex xix. Paradife Loft, with a Life of the Author, hand- 

fomely printed in poft 8vo. with many fine plates. Vernor^ 

&c. Lond. 1808. 
exxx. The fame, in one vol. 3 2mo. Walker, &c. 1808. 
cxxxi. Poetical Works, with a Critical Effay, by J. Aikin, 

M.D. and the prefent editor's text. 4 vols. 8 vo. Cadell, 1808. 
cxxxii. Latin and Italian Poems of Milton, tranflated into 

Engliih Verfe, with the Originals ; and a Fragment of a 

Commentary on Paradife Loft, by the late William Cowper, 

E%. 4to. Johnfon. Lond. 1808. 



200 LIST OF EDITIONS. 



Greek Tr an flat ions. 

1. In 173(5, the celebrated Richard Dawes published propo? 
fals for printing, by fubfcription, " Paradifi Amiffi, a ch 
Miltono confcripti, Liber primus, Graeca. verfione donatus, 
una cum annotation ibus." Thefe propofals were accom- 
panied with a fpecimen, which may be feen in the feventh 
volume of The General Dictionary, p. 587, and in the 
Preface to his Mifcellanea Critica, where he explains his 
reafons for not proceeding in his undertaking, and very 
ingenuoufly points out the errours of his own performance. 
See Biograph. Brit. vol. o. edit. Kippis, p. 20. 

ii. Paradifi Amiffi Liber primus Graece, cum celebri verfione 
Latina Rev. Gulielmi Dobfon, Oxonienfis, nuper defuncti. 
[Dedicated by the tranflator, Dr. Stratford, to the then 
biiliop of Deny.] Dublin, 4to. 1770. 

in. In the Gentleman's Magazine for 1779, p- 19 1* the 
following mention is made of a Greek translation by 
£c Thomas Denny, a literary itinerant, particularly fkilled 
in Greek. Among the Roman poets, Horace and Virgil 
were his chief favourites, as Homer was of the Greek, 
whofe ftyle he has well imitated in a translation of the fhft 
fix books of Milton's Paradife Loit into Greek ; which, 
with a great number of detached pieces on various fubjects, 
in that and Latin, Mere preferved by feveral gentlemen of 
his acquaintance.' 1 

iv. Johannis Miltoni Samfon Agoniftes Graeco carmine red- 
ditus cum verfione Latina. A Gcorgio Henrico Glade, 
A.M. iEdis Chrifti nuper Aluinno. Oxon. 8vo. 1788. 

v. In the Gentleman's .Magazine for 1791, p. 471, a fpeci- 
men of a Greek tranllation, dated Hertford, May 1 ], 1791, 
by James Moore, Mailer of the Grammar School, is offered 
to the pubiick \ according to which fpecimen, " I pur- 
pofe," fays Mr. Moore, " publishing Milton's Paradifi 
Loft" 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 201 

VI. Miltonis Poema, Lycidas, Graec& redditum [A Joanne 
Plumptre, tunc Canonico Vigornienfi, nunc autem De- 
cano Gloceft.] 4to. 1797- 

Latin Tr (inflations. 

I. Paradifus AmhTa, Poema Heroicum, quod a Joanne 
Miltono Anglo Anglice fcriptum in decern libros digeftum 
eft, nunc autem a viris quibufdam natione eadem oriundis in 
Linguam Romanam transfertur. Liber primus. Imprim. 
Nov. 18. 1685. 4to. Lond. Impenfis T. Dring, 1686. 
A dedication to Sir Thomas Mompeffon is prefixed, figned 
by J. C. 

ii. Johannis Miltoni Paradifi Amiffi Liber primus, ex Angli- 
cana lingua in Latinam converfus. 4to. Cantabrigiae, 1691. 
The dedication is figned by T. P., who is faid to be Thomas 
Power, of Trin. Coll. Cambridge. He tranflated into 
Latin verfe the remaining books, which exift in manufcript. 
See Peck's Memoirs of Milton, p. 68. 

in. Paraphraiis Poetica in tria Johannis Miltoni, viri clarif- 
fimi, Poemata, viz. Paradifum AmhTum, Paradifum Re- 
cuperatum, et Samfonem Agoniften. Autore Gulielmo 
Hogaeo. 8vo. Lond. I69O. And at Rotterdam, 1699. 

From the dedications of this ingenious and learned 
Scotchman, prefixed to his translations of Lycidas and 
Comus, we learn that he experienced great diftrefs. He 
had publilhed in 1682 " Paraphraiis in Jobum Poetica;" 
and afterwards u Satyra Sacra, five Paraphraiis in Eccle- 
fiaften Poetica." To this publication he has prefixed a 
poetical account of himfelf. He appears to have been a 
native of Gowry in Perthihire, and to have known only 
misfortune fince he came into England. He publilhed 
alfo " Liber primus Principis Ar&uri (a Rich. Blackmore, 
Eq. Aur.) Latine red. 1700," and feveral other Latin 
verfions of Englifti poems. Of a perfon, who had thus 
contributed to extend the fame of Milton, thefe few no- 
tices may not feem improper. I wife I could add that his 



205 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

declining days were comfortable. Part of his facred poetry 
has been reprinted in if Poetarnm Scotorum Mnfae Sacra?, 
2 torn. Edinb. 1739 :" of which William Lauder is the 
editor. Of his Paradife Loft Lauder bafely availed him- 
felf. See vol. vi. p. 408. 

iv. Paraphrafis Latina in duo Poemata, (quorum alterum & 
Miltono, alterum a Clievlando, Anglice fcriptum fuit,) 
quibus deploratur mors juvenis praclari et eruditi, D. Ed- 
vardi King, qui nave, qua ve&abatur, faxo illifa, in Oceano 
llvbernico fubmerfus eft. Autore Gulielmo Hogaeo. 
London, printed for the author. 4to. 1694. There is 
another Latin tranflation of Lycidas in hexameters, pre- 
ferved in the Lambeth MSS. No. 8 41. 8. — I am alfo 
poffetVed of a Latin tranflation of Lycidas in manufcript. 

v. Lufus Amatorius ; five Mufaei Poema &c. Cui alia? 
(tres fcilicct) accedunt nugae poetica?. Authore C. B. e 
Coll. Di. Jo. Bapt. Soc. The firft of thefe " nugae po- 
etical" is Fragmentum libri quinti Poematis ver& Divini 
quod Paradifus Amifla inferibitur, &c. 4to. Lond. 1694. 
Peck was mifinformed by .Dr. Birch in dating this publi- 
cation 1699. 

vi. Comoedia Joannis Miltoni, viri clariflimi, (quae agebatur 
in Arce Ludenfi,) paraphraftice reddita, a Gulielmo Hogaeo. 
4to. Lond. 1698. 

vi t. Paradifus Amifla. ' Poema Anglice fcriptum a Johanne 
Milton. Nunc autem ex Au&oris exemplari Latin£ red- 
ditum. Per M. B [old, Aul. Trin. Cantab. Soc] Liber 
primus. 8vo. Lond. 1702. The translator printed two 
oilier title-pages : viz. " Paradifus Amifla. Poema, La- 
tino carmine redditum ex ipfo Authore Johanne Milton. 
Lib. prim. Lond. 1702." And " Paradifus Amiffa Mil- 
fonia, Lat. carmine reddita. Lib. prim. Operis totius 
itnen. Lond. 1717." Reprinted in 4to. 1736. 

viii. Peek relates that, in 1709, he was informed at Corpus 
Chrifti College, Oxford, that Dr. William Tilly, a learned 
fellow of that focicty, had tranflatcd a great part of the 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 203 

Paradife Loft into Latin verfe. See Mem. of Milton, 
p. 69. 

ix. Part of the fourth book of Paradife Loft,, tranflated 
into Latin hexameters, by John Theobald, dedicated to 
Francis Douce, M. D. 4to. Lond. Printed by B. Milles. 
[Without date.] 

x. In Dodfley's Publick Regifter for 1741, p. 85, there 
is a tranilation from 11 Penferofo into Latin hexameters, 
figned W. R. ; and a fecond, from the fame poem, into 
elegiacks, by the fame perfon, in p. 86. 

XI. Miltoni Paradifus Amiffus, 2 vols, 4to. Dr. Trapp's 
tranflation. Vol. 1ft. 1740, vol. 2d. 1744. 

xu. The beginning of the firft book of Paradife Loft tranf- 
lated into Latin hexameters, by Mr. Samuel Say. Poems, 
4to. Lond. 1745. 

Xin. The fame, by L. de Bonneval, Gent. Mag. 1746, 
p. 548. The fame number of lines is alfo extracted from 
the verfions of Power, Bold, and Trapp, with the addi- 
tion of another tranflation, figned I. C. p. 661. 

Xiv. Tranflations from Comus in the Carmina Quadragefi- 
malia, Oxon. J 748, vol. ii. pp. 25, 73. 

XV. A Latin verfion of L' Allegro, by Chriftopher Smart, 
Poems, p. 181. edit. 4to. 1752. 

XVI. The Ode on May Morning, tranflated into Latin hex- 
ameters, in Dodfley's Mufeum, vol. i. p. 217. 

xvii. Paradifus Amiffus Poema Joannis Miltoni, Latine red- 
ditum k Gulielmo Dobfon, LL. B. Nov. Coll. Oxon, 
Socio. 2 vols. 4to. 1753. This admirable tranflation was 
encouraged by Mr. Benfon, who had erected in Weft- 
minfter Abbey the monument to the poet. Oldys, in his 
manufcript notes on Langbaine's Dramatick poets, pre- 
ferved in the Britifh Mufeum, fays that Dobfon's reward 
was to be a thoufand pounds whan the tranflation ihould 
be finiftied, with the intereft of that fum while he was 
performing it. 

xviii. Imitataa Miltoni L'Allegro Carmina. Dated Lichfield, 
Nov. 1, 1794. Gent. Mag. vol. 64, p. 1134. 



204 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

Italian Tran/lations. 

I. The celebrated Mr. Berkeley, afterwards bifliop of Cloynej 
had been informed in 1714, that, at Florence, Milton was 
then tranflated into Italian verfe. See Mem. of bifliop 
Berkeley, 2d edit. p. 54. The younger Richardfon had 
alfo feen at Florence an Italian tranflation of Paradife Loft 
in manufcript by the Abb6 Salvini, who, in 1715, pub- 
liflied an Italian verfion of Addifon's Cato. Whether this 
might be the tranflation, of which information had been 
given to Mr. Berkeley ; or whether a tranflation of Mil- 
ton's other Poems alfo had been made, cannot now be 
known. However, fee the next article in this lift of 
Italian tranflations. Wright, in his Travels through 
France, Italy, &c. in 1720, 1721, and 1722, notices 
Salvini's tranflation of Cato, which, he fays, " Mr. Addifon 
himfelf declared was the beft tranflation he ever faw." And 
he adds, Salvini " fliewed us fome parts of Milton's 
Paradife Loft, which he had occafionally turned into Italian ; 
and they read admirably well in that harmonious language." 
Travels, &c. vol. ii. p. 425. Salvini's tranflation has not 
been publiflied. The learned Abbe was extremely fond of 
Engliih literature. He thus declares his love, in a letter to 
a friend, dated Nov. 18. 1713. " Or che penfate? ulti- 
mamente mi fono addato all' Inglefe, e mi diletta, e mi 
giova aflaiflimo. E gl' Inglefi, eflendo nazione penfativa, 
inventiva, bizzarra, libera, e franca, io ci trovo ue' loro 
libri di grande vivacita, e fpirito, e la Greca, e 1' altre 
lingue molto mi conferifcono a tenere a mente i loro vo- 
caboli per via d' etimologie, e di fnnilitudini di fuoni.* 
Lettere d' Uomini illuflri, Venez. 4to. 1735, p. 167. It 
appears that Salvini tranflated alfo The Fair Penitent, 
and Jane Shore ^ into Italian. Ibid, p. 322. 

n. Paradifo Perduto, primo libro, tradotto dal Conte Lorenzo 
Magaiotti. MS. Sec the Catalogue <>t Shelbnrnc Papers, 
p. 1 17. Lot B(jl. The Conte Magaiotti is thus defcribed 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 205 

in an Elegy by Henry Newton, entitled Nemora Floren- 
Una, 1709. 

(< Sed cum cceleftem referat mirantibus orbenr, 
" Miltonique comes, nobile furgit opus ; 

" Turn fuperum redeunt acies, atque aelia deorum; 
(( Refque limul fuperum, verba, modofque legunt." 

See Henrici Newton Epijiola, Orationes, et Carmina, 
4to. Lucae, 1710. Carin. p. 31. This Henry Newton was 
the friend of Lord Somers, and Envoy Extraordinary to the 
Court of Tufcany. Pombly Magalotti's verfion might be 
that of which Berkeley had received information, 
in. Del Paradifo Perduto Poema Inglefe di Giovanni Milton 

Traduzzione di Paolo Rolli. Londra, fol. 1735. 
iv. II Paradifo Perduto di Giovanni Milton, tradotto in 
Verfo Italiano da Felice Mariottini. With the Life of 
Milton, and Mr. Addifon's Criticifm ; to both which, ad- 
ditions are fubjoined : And with copious annotations. The 
firft book only. Lond. 8vo. 1794. 
V. II Paradifo Perduto di Giovanni Milton, tradotto in 
Verfo Italiano da Felici Mariottini. [The whole Poem, in 
two parts.] Lond. 8vo. 1796. 
vi. Mr. Walker, in his Hift. Memoir on Italian Tragedy,, 
1799, p. 229, relates that the learned Antonio Conti, a 
Venetian nobleman, who, with the afliftance of Lord Bo- 
lingbroke, had made a free vernon of the whole of Pope's 
Rape of the Lock, had tranflated part of Milton's Paradife 
Loft ; which, however, is fuppofed not to have been pub- 
liihed. 
vii. II Como, Favola Bofchereccia, trad, da Gaetano Po- 

lidori, 8vo. Lond. 1802. 
vili. L' Allegro, trad, da Gaetano Polidori, 12mo. Lond. 
1805. [In this and the preceding tranflation, many paf- 
fages are prefented in their foreign drefs with remarkable 
elegance and -felicity ; and both ftrongly evince the ability 
of Signor Polidori.] 
ix. Como, Dramma con Mafchere di Milton, traduzzione 
foftenuta ad litteram, 4to. Par. 1806. [Publiilied with a 



206 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

French literal tranilution alio of Comus. See the Lift of 
French Tranflations.] 

French Tranjlations* 

j. Voltaire, in a letter to Horace Walpole, dated 15 Jnly, 
1 768, fays, " I was the firft that introduced Shakfpeare 
to the French ; forty yean ago I tranflated fome paifages 
from him, as well as from Milton, Waller, &c. See Hift. 
Memoirs of Voltaire,, Lond. 8vo. 1777, p. 208. 

II. Le Paradis Perdu, &c. Avec les remarques de M. Addi- 
fon. Par Monf. Dupre de St. Maur. In profe. 3 vols, 
12mo. Paris, in 172Q- 

in. Le Paradis Perdu, Le Par. Reconquis, Lycidas, II Pen- 
ferofo, et Cantique fur la fete de Noel, &c. 3 vols. J2mo. 
Hag. 1730. To this edition are added DifTertation Critique 
de M. Conftantin de Magny, which is thought by fome 
to have been written by the Abbe Pellegrin, and La Chute 
de T Homme, poeme Francois par M. Durand. Several 
paflages are reftored in this edition, which in that of Paris 
had been retrenched. 

iv. Traduction de Milton, Liv. i. ver. 242, &c. i. e. Dif- 
cours de Satan precipite du haut de Ciel & la vue de 
1'Enfer. [By Mr. Rumgold, a Student in the Jefuits 
College, at Paris. In French rhymes. Printed in 
Poems by J. Whaley, Fellow of Kings College, Cam- 
bridge, 8vo. 1745.] 

v. Traduction du Paradis Perdu, chargee de Notes. Par 
Louis Racine, en 3 vols. Svo. " Elle eft, en quelques en- 
droits, plus fidele que celle de M. Dupre de St Maur ; 
inais un n' y fent point, comme dans celle-ci, Y enthouli- 
aime de f Hom6re Anglois." Vid. Nouv. Dia. Hift. a 
Caen, Racine, (Louis.) 

vt. L'AllegtO et Le Penficrofo de Milton. Traduit en vers 

Francois. Par Uibouville. 4to. Lond. 1766. 
vn. M. el*- Beaulaton a fait paroitre, en 1777 et 1778, une 
traduction eil vers Francois de Paradis Perdu, laquclle offrc 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 207 

des beautes et des defauts. See Nouv. DISl. Hift. k Caen, 
Milton, (Jean.) 
Vin. Le Paradis Perdu, &c. de St. Main's edit. 3 vols. 
18mo. Geneve, 1777. 

IX. Le Meme, 3 vols. 8vo. Paris, 1782. To this edition, 
befides the Lettres Critiques fur le Paradis Perdu, et fur 
le Paradis Recouquis, are added feveral Notes on the text. 

X. Le Pere de Mareuil, Jefuite, a donne ime traduction 
Francoife, in 12mo. de Paradis Reconquis. See Nouv. 
Diet. a\ Caen, Milton, ( Jean.) 

XI. Le Paradis Perdu, &c. 2 vols, large quarto, with fine en- 
gravings. A magnificent edition. Printed at Paris. 1792. 

xii. Paradis Perdu, trad, par M. Monneron. 

xin. Les Amours Epiques, &c. [That is, tranflations of 
Epifodes on Love, compofed by the beft epick poets. 
Accordingly part of Milton's fourth book of Paradife Loft 
is here very curioujly done into French /] Trad, par 
P. Grandmaifon, 12mo. 1804. 

xiv. Paradis Perdu, trad, per Jacques de Lille, Paris & 
Lond. 1805. 

xv. Comus, Mafque de Milton, traduction litterale, 4to. 
Par. 1806. [This and the Italian tranflation of Comus in 
1 806 are ftated in a preface by the Hon. and Rev. Mr, 
Egerton to have been made by two perfons, whom he en- 
gaged in this employment, " dont les talens litteraires font 
connus."] 

Dutch and German Ti^anjlations. 

I. Jo. Miltons verluftigte Paradies, &c. 8vo. Zerbft. 1682, 
[Of this book Vogt gives the following account : * Liber 
fumme quid£m rarus, at immerito, cum verfio fit infulfa. 
CamTa raritatis procul dubio exinde derivanda, quia autor 
Ernft. Gottl. vom Berge propriis fumptibus excudendum 
curavit." Catal. Lib. Rar. ed Hamb. 1747, p- 467. 

II. Milton Paradys Valooren, 4to. Harlem, 172S. In Dutch 
blank verfe. This is prefumed to be the tranflation by Mr. 
Theodore Haake, R. S. S., which, Aubrey fays, was 
highly approved by Fabricius. 



203 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

ill. Het Paradys Verlooren. Gefchetft na't Engelfch Hel- 
dendicht van John Milton, door- L. P. 8vo. Amfteldam, 
1730. [In rhyme; with a few notes, and a life of 
Milton.] 

IV. Jo. Miltons Verluft des Pardiefes, &c. 8vo. Franck. fund 
Leipzig, 1732. 

v. Milton's wiedereroberies Paradies, 8vo. Bafil, 1752. 

vi. — verlohrnes Paradies, von Zacharia, 2 bande, 8vo. 

Altona, 1762. 

VII. Daffelbe, von Bodmer. Zurich, 17§9. 

viii. Daffelbe, von Bodmer, 2 bande, 8vo. Zurich, 1780. 
This excellent German poet has alfo given a critical ana- 
lyfis of the Paradife Loft. Of the high efteem, in which 
the poetry of Milton was held by Bodmer, and alfo by 
Klopftock, fee proofs in " Cara&eres des poetes les plus 
diftingu6s de Y Allemagne. Par M. Pfenninguer. Zurich, 
1789." 

IX. Milton's Allegro und Penferofo, 8vo. Enriched with 
beautiful head and tail-pieces. Germ, and Eng. Manheim, 
1782. 

x. wiedereroberies Paradies, nebft feinem leben, 

anch dramat. und fleinen neuern Gedichten. 8vo. DefTau, 
1782. 

xi. — — veil. Paradies, ubers. v. Burde, 2 Thle, 8vo. 
Berlin, 1793. 

Spariifli Tranflation. 

I. In Los Eruditos a la Fioleta by Don Jofeph Vafques, 
publilhed in 1772, part of the firft book of Paradife Loft 
is quoted and tranflated. See the Appendix to Twifs's 
Travels through Portugal and Spain. 

Portuguefe Tranjlatlons. 

I. Paraifo perdido, poema heroico de J. Milton, traduzido 
em vulgar pelo P. Jofe Amaro da Silva, Prefbitere Vima- 
renfe. Com o Paraifo reftaurado do mefmo author. 
(With fliort Notes, and Mr. Addition's Criticifm.) Em 
Lilboa, 2 vols. 8vo. 1792. 



LIST OF EDITIONS. £09 

Ruffian Tr (inflation. 

1. S torch, in his Picture of Peterfburg, mentions a Ruffian 
tranflation of Paradife Loft. 

Englifli Tranflations. 

1. The Epigram on Salmafius, by Mr. Washington, 169£. 
II. The Verfes to Chriftina, in Toland's Life of Milton, 

1698. They are afcribed to Fleetwood Shephard in a 
worthlefs book, entitled Chorus Poetarum, 8vo. 1684, 
They have lately been tranflated alfo in the Monthly Ma- 
gazine. 

in. Milton's Italian Poems, tranflated and addreffed to a 
Gentleman of Italy. By Dr. J. Langhorne, 4to. 1776. 

iv. Some of the Italian Sonnets and the Canzone, have 
alfo appeared, either tranflated or freely paraphrafed, in 
Aaron Hill's Works, in the Gentleman's Magazine, the 
Lady's Magazine, the Annual Regifter, Fawkes and 
Woty's Poetical Calendar, the edition of the Poets in 
1 779, and in the Monthly Magazine by Capel Lofft Efq. 

v. Manfo; from the Latin of Milton; in Englifli heroicks. 
In Poems by the Rev. Jofeph Sterling, Lond. Svo. 1789. 

vi. Nature not liable to decay. From Milton's Latin Poem, 
by the Rev Henry Boyd. Poet. Regift. for 1805, p. 32. 

VII. Many fpirited and elegant tranflations from the Latin 
poems, by the Rev. Dr. Symmons, in his Life of Milton, 
1806. 

vin. Latin and Italian Poems of Milton, tranflated into 
Englifli verfe, &c. By the late William Cowper Efq. 
With a Preface by the Editor, [William Hayley, Efq.] 
4to. Chichefter, 18 OS. Several admirable tranflations 
from thefe Poems of Milton by Cowper, had appeared in 
Mr. Hayley s Life of the great poet, in 1794. 

Alterations of Milton. 

2. The State of Innocence, or the Fall of Man. An 
opera, in rhyme, by Dryden. 4to. 1674 

vol. x, P 



*10 LIST OF EDITIONS. 

it. Milton's Paradife Loft imitated in rhyme. In the fourth, 
fixth, and ninth books ; containing The Primitive Loves, 
The Battle of the Angels, The Fall of Man. By Mr. 
John Hopkins. Lond. 8vo. 1699. This rhymift opens 
his Preface thus: " It has been the misfortune of one of 
my name to affront the facred profe of David with intol- 
erable rhyme ; and 'tis mine, 1 fear, to have abus'd all- 
moft as facred verfe !" — I am clearly of opinion, from a 
perufal of thefe rhymes, that John Hopkins is a true de- 
fendant of the original John Hopldm, and the worthy 
heir of his poetical fame. He was partly induced to put 
Milton into rhyme, according to his intimation in the 
Preface, in order to oblige the ladies ! 

in. A Paraphrafe in verfe, on part of the flrft book of 
Milton's Paradife Loft, by W. Howard. 4to. London. 
Printed for the author, 1738. The title-page was varied. 
For the author, an aged and infirm man, in order to re- 
lieve his wants, circulated his paraphrafe by printing on 
every title-page an addrefs to fome diftinguiihed perfon. 
My copy is infcribed to the Dutchefs of Bolton. 

iv. Comus, a Maik. Now adapted to the Stage. As altered 
from Milton's Malic. By Dr. Dalton. Lond. 12mo. 1735. 
This judicious and elegant alteration has been often re- 
printed, both in ICmo. and in 8vo. It was received with 
the higheft applaufe on its firft reprefentation. The Songs 
were fet to mufick by Dr. Arne. 

v. Sabrina, an Opera, Ital. and Eng. (the balls of which is 
profeffed to be the Maik of Comus) by Paul Itolli, 12mo. 
Lond. 1737. 

vf. Le Paradis Terreftre. Imite de Milton. Divertiflement 
fpii ituel en un A&e. Execute par l'Acatiemie de Mufique 
dr Poitiers, le 23 de Mars 1736. See Oeuvres Melees 
de M. l'Abbe Nadal, Paris. 1738. 

\ 11. L' Allegro and II Penferofo, with a third part, entitled 
Moderation, adapted to Handel's Mufick, 1739. 

\iw. Par. Loft, attempted in rhime, Book 1. 8vo. Lond. 
1740. by A. J aekfon, Bookfeller in Clare-Court, Drury 
Lane. 



LIST OF EDITIONS. 211 

ix. Samfon, altered, with the admiffion of many paffages 
from Milton's early poems, and adapted to Handel's 
Muiick, 1742. 

x. The State of Innocence, and Fall of Man : Defcribed 
in Milton's Par. Loft. Render'd into profe. With Notes 
&c. From the French of Raymond de St. Maur. By a 
Gentleman of Oxford. Lond. Printed for Ofbofhe, 1745. 
8vo. Mr. Steevens ridicules Ofborne for this publication, 
as being ignorant in what form or language our Paradife 
Loft was written. Shakfpeare, vol. i. p. 72. edit. 1793* 

XI. Le Paradis Terreftre. Poeme Imite de Milton, en vi 
chants. Par Madame du BoCage. 8vo. Lond. 1748. 

xii. There is, in French alfo, La Chriftiade ou Le Paradis 
Reconquis, pour fervir de fuite au Paradis Perdu de Milton- 
With a large Difcours Preliminaire. In fix volumes, -a 
Bruxelles, (or rather at Paris,) 1753. 

xiii. A New Verfion of Paradife Loft, &c» In which the 
meafure and verification are corrected and harmonifed ; 
the obfcurities elucidated ; and the faults, which the author 
Hands accufed of by Addifon and other of the criticks, 
are removed. With annotations on the original text, to 
mew the reafonablenefs of this new Verfion !! By a Gen- 
tleman of Oxford. 8vo. 1756. The name of this doughty 
reformer, Ihrouding himfelf under a fictitious title, was 
Green. See Farmer's Effay on the Learning of Shak- 
fpeare, 3d. edit. p. 27- Of this Nezv Ferfion only the 
firft book appeared. The performance indeed is a molt 
ftriking example of vanity and abfurdity united* 

xiv. Tanevot, a learned Frenchman, has been fuppofed to 
be indebted to Milton in his tragedy of Adam and Eve, 
which is pubrtfhed with his other works in 1765. See 
Nouv. Dic~t.. Hift. a Caen. Tanevot, (Alexandre.) 

xv. The Recovery of Man, or Milton's Paradife Regained, 
in Profe. After the manner of the Archbifhop of Cambray, 
author of Telemachus. To which is prefixed the life of 
the Author. 12mo. f. 1. 1771. 
y 2 



21* LIST OF DETACHED 

xvi. Comus, A Mails. Altered from Milton. By George 
Colman, Efq. 8vo. 1772. This alteration alfo has been 
frequently reprinted, and is the Comus which now pre 
ferves its place upon the Stage. 

xvii. Adam, or the Fatal Difobedience. An Oratorio. In 
Poems of R. Jago. Lond. 1784. 

xviii. Le Paradis Reconquis : Poeme, imite de Milton, par 
L. R. Lafaye, Gradue en 1' Univerfite de Paris Maitre de 
Langue Franc,oife, en vi chants. 12mo. Lond. 1789. 

Detached Pieces of Criticifm relating to Milton, 
his editors, 8$c. 

I. Annotations on Milton's Paradife Loft. Wherein the texts 
of Sacred Writ, relating to the Poem, are quoted ; the 
parallel places and imitations of the mod excellent Homer, 
and Virgil, cited and compared ; all the obscure parts 
rendered in phrafes more familiar; the old and obfolete 
words, with their Originals, explain'd and made eaiie to 
the Engliih reader. By Pfatrickj H[ume.] $>iko<nowTns 
Lond. Fol. 1695. [Ufually, but not always, fubjoined 
to Tonfon s edit, of 1695.] 

II. Milton s Sublimity afierted, Lond. 8vo. 1709- 

in. Addifon's Criticifm on the Paradife Loft, [Separately. 

printed.] l2mo. London. Printed for Tonfon, 1719. 
iv. Voltaire's EiTay on the epick poetry of the European 

nations, from Homer down to Milton, Lond. 8vo. 1727. 
v. Remarks upon M. Voltaire's EiTay on the epick poetry of 

the European nations. By Paul Rolli. Lond. 8vo. 

1728. [This writer is the tranflator of Paradife Loft into 

Italian verfe. He defends Milton, with coniiderable acute- 

nefs, againft feveral of Voltaire's prepoftcrous criticifms.] 
vi. Diftertation Critique fur le Paradis Perdu Poeme He- 

roique de Milton, par M. Conftantin de Magny, &c. 

12mo. Par. J 729- [See the preceding Lift of French 

Tranflations, No. III.] 
vii. Dr. Bentley'a Emendation! on the twelve books of 

Milton's Paradife Loft, 12mo. Lond 1732. 



PIECES OF CRITICISM. 213 

vni. Milton reftor'd, and Bentley depos'd. Containing i. 
Some obfervations on Dr. Bentley 's Preface, ii. His va- 
rious readings and notes on Paradife Loft, and Milton's 
text, fet in oppofite columns, with remarks thereon, iii. 
Paradife Loft, attempted in rime, Book the firft, ad- 
dreffed to Dr. Bentley, from Dean Swift. Numb. x. 
Lond. 8vo. 1732. [The pretended addrefs to Bentley 
from Dean Swift is printed in the fecond volume of this 
edition, p. 281, where a further account of this pamphlet 
is given. The addrefs is borrowed from Swift's Advice 
to a Young Poet.] 

* ix. A friendly Letter to Dr. Bentley. Occafion'd by his 

new edition of Paradife Loft. By a Gentleman of 
Chrift-Church College, Oxon. Lond. 8vo. 1732. [The 
author faid to be Dr. Pearce.] 

x. A Review of the Text of the twelve books of Par. Loft, 
in which the chief of Dr. Bentley's emendations are con- 
fided d, &c. [Firft printed in feparate parts.] Lond. 1732. 
[Complete.] Lond. 8vo. 1733, [By Dr. Pearce.] 

xi. Critical Diflertation on Paradife Regained, by the Rev. 
Mr. Meadowcourt, Prebendary of Worcefter, Lond. 
4to. 1732. Reprinted in 8vo. 1748. 

* xii. Explanatory Notes and Remarks on Paradife Loft. 

By J. Richardfon, Father and Son. With the Life of 
the Author, and a Difcourfe on the Poem. By J. R„ 
Sen. Lond. 8vo. 1734. 

* xiii. Remarks on Spenfer's Poems, and on Milton, Lond. 

8vo. 1734. [By Dr. Jortin.] 
xiv. Remarks on the three firft books of Par. Loft, by Mr. 

Warburton, in the Works of the Learned, 173Q, &c. 
xv. Letters concerning Poetical Traiiilations, and Virgil's 

and Milton's Arts of Verfe, &c. Lond. 8vo. 1739. [By 

William Benfon, Efq.] 
xvi. Explanatory and Critical Notes on divers paiTages of 

Milton and Shakfpeare, with an examination of Milton's 

ftile, by Francis Peck, M. A. Printed with his " New 

Memoirs of the Life &c. of Milton." 4to. 1740. 



214 LIST OF DETACHED 

xvii. Effay on Milton's imitation of the Ancients, 8vo. 
1741. 

xv II i. A complete Commentary, with etymological, expla- 
natory, critical, and elaffical Notes on Par. Loft. By 
James Paterfon, M.A., and Philologift. Lond. 8vo. 
1744. 

xix. Effay on the Numbers of Par. Loft. By Mr. Samuel 
Say. Printed with his Poems, 4to. 1745. 

xx. Lauder's Attack againft Milton, in the Gentleman's 
Magazine for January 1746-7, &c. 

xxi. Zoilomaftix: or a Vindication of Milton from all the 
invidious charges of Mr. William Lauder. With fome 
new Remarks on Paradife Loft. By R. Richardfon, B. A. 
late of Clare-Hall, Cambridge. 8vo. 1747. 

xxii. Furius : or a modeft Attempt towards an hiftory of 
the life and furprifing exploits of the famous W[illiam] 
L[auder], Critick and Thief-Catcher, 8vo. 1748. [Said 
to be written by Mr. Henderfon, a bookfeller.] 

xx 1 1 1. An Effay on Milton's ufe and imitation of the 
Moderns, in his Par. Loft. By W r illiam Lauder. Lond. 
8vo. 1750. [With a Preface by Dr. Johnfon.] 

xxiv. Pandaemonium : Or a New infernal Expedition, in- 
scribed to a Being who calls himfelf William Lauder, 
4to. 1750. 

xxv. Milton vindicated from the Charge of Plagiarifm, 
brought againft him by Mr. Lauder, and Lauder himfelf 
convicted of feveral Forgeries and Impofitions on the 
Publick. By John Douglas, M. A. Re&or of Eton Con- 
ftantine, Salop. [Late Lord Bifliop of Salifbury.] 8vo. 
1750. 

xxvi. The Preface to the Sea-Piece, a Poem, [containing 
a defence of Milton againft Lauder.] By J. Kirkpatrick, 
M.D. Svo. Lond. 1750. 

xxvn. Criticifni on Samfon Agoniftes, in the Rambler, 
No. 139, 140. [Dr. Johnfon.] 1750. 

xxvm. Criticifni on the Verification of Milton, in The 
farae, No. 8C, &c» 



PIECES OF CRITICISM. 215 

J xxix. A Letter to the Rev. Mr. Douglas, occafioned by 
his Vindication of Milton, &c. By William Lauder, A.M. 
4to. 1751. [Written by Dr. Johnfon.] 
• xxx. An Apology for Mr. Lauder. In a Letter to the 
Archbifliop of Canterbury. 8vo. 1751. 

x x x i . Criticifm on Blemifties in the Paradife Loft, in The 
Adventurer, No. 101. [Dr. J. Warton.] 1752. 

xxxii. King Charles I. vindicated from the charge of 
Plagiarifm, brought againft him by Milton, and Milton 
himfelf convicted of Forgery, and a grois Impofition on 
the Publick, &c. By W. Lauder, 8vo. 1754. [Of this 
impudent pamphlet, the title of which is a parody on Mr. 
Douglas's Vindication of Milton, fee an account in The 
Inquiry into the Origin of Par. Lojt, in the fecond 
volume of this edition.] 

xxxiii. Milton no Plagiary : or A Detection of the For- 
geries contained in Lauder's Effay &c. By J. Douglas, &c. 
[As before, 2d edit, enlarged.] 8vo. 1756. 

xxx iv. Remarks upon Paradife Loft, hiftorical, geographi- 
cal, philological, critical, and explanatory. By W, Maftey. 
12mo. 1761. 

xxxv. II Taffo, a Dialogue: the Speakers John Milton, 
and Torquato Taffo. In which new light is thrown on 
their poetical and moral characters. 8vo. 176 1. 

- xxxvi. A familiar Explanation of the Poetical Works of 

Milton. To which is prefixed Mr. Addifon's Criticifm on 
Par. Loft. With a Preface. By the Rev. Mr. Dodd. 
Loud. 12mo. 1762. 

xx xvii A Letter concerning Epick Poems, taken from 
Scripture Hiftory, 8vo. Lond. 1764. 

xx xvi 1 1. Effays on Various Subjects of Tafte and Criti- 
cifm, 8vo. Lond. 1780. [In which is a Critique on the 
firft book of Paradife Loft.] 

xxxix. Prefaces Biographical and Critical to the works of 
the moft eminent Englifti poets, by Dr. Johnfon. 1781. 

XL. Criticifm on Paradife Loft, by Dr. Blair, in his Lectures 
on Rhetorick, &c. 4to. 1783. 

- xlx. Criticifm on Samfon Agoniftes, in refutation of the 



216 LIST OF DETACHED 

cenfures of Dr. Johnfon, by Mr. Cumberland, in The 

Oblerver, 8vo. 1784. 
X L 1 1 . A Letter to the Rev. Mr. T. Warton, on his late 

Edition of Milton's Juvenile Poems. [Said to be written 

by Samuel Derby, M. A. Reaor of VVhatlield in Suffolk.] 

Lond. 8vo. 1785. 
XLin. Critical Eflay on Lycidas, By John Scott, Efq. 

Printed with his " Critical Effays on fome of the Poems 

of feveral Englifli poets." Lond. 8vo. 1785. 
XL iv. Elements of Punctuation, containing Remarks on an 

ElTay on Punctuation, and Critical Observations on fome 

paflages in Milton. By David Steel, junior. 12mo, 

Lond. 1786. 
XL v. Imitations and accidental Refemblances of Milton, by 

T. H. W. (Thomas Holt White) Gent. Mag, 1786, 1787. 
xlvi. Mifcellaneous Remarks on Milton, by T. C. O. [the 

late ingenious and amiable Mr. Headley of Trinity Col- 
lege, Oxford.] Gent. Mag. 1786, 1787. 
xlvii. Criticifm on Samfon Agoniftes, in refutation of the 

cenfures of Dr. Johnfon. [By the late W. J. Mickle, Efq.] 

Europ. Mag. 1788. 
xlvi 1 1. Curfory Remarks on fome of the ancient Engliih 

poets, particularly Milton. [By Philip Neve, Efq.] 8vo, 

1789- 

xl ix. Remarks on the Greek Verfes of Milton, by Dr. 
Charles Burney, 1790. 

L. Conjectures on the Origin of Paradife Loft, by William 
Hayley, Efq. Printed in his 2d edit, of the Life of Mil- 
ton, 4to. 1796. 

Li. The Similies of Homer, Virgil, and Milton, examined 
and compared, by J. A. Monthly Mag. 1796, 1797, 1798. 

Li I. On Milton's Imitations, or Refemblanees, in Par. Loft, 
by the Rev. (i. Wakefield. Monthly Mag. 1797, 1798. 
. Li 1 1. Preliminary Obfervations on Samfon Agoniftes, as 
adapted to the Stage, in Critical, Poetical, and Dramatick 
Works, by John Penn, Efq. Hvo. Lond. 1798. 

Liv. Thoughts on the Origin of Paradife Loft. By Jofeph 



PIECES OF CRITICISM. 217 

Cooper Walker, Efq. Printed with his " Hiftorical Me- 
moir on Italian Tragedy " 4to. 1799* 

XiV. Confiderations on Milton's early reading, and the prima 
ftamina of his Par. Loft ; together with Extracts from a 
poet of the fixteenth century, [Jofhua Sylvefter.] In a 
Letter to William Falconer, M.D., from Charles Dunfter, 
M.A. 8vo. Lond. 1800. . 

lvi. Criticifm on Paradife Loft, by Mr. Barron, in his 
Lectures on Belles Lettres, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1806. 

fcvii. Fragment of a Commentary on Paradife Loft, by the 
late William Cowper, Efq. [Subjoined to the Latin and 
Italian Poems of Milton, tranflated into Englifli Verfe by 
Cowper, accompanied with a Preface by Mr. Hayley, and 
JNotes of Various Authors.] 4to. Chicheiter. 1808. 



VERBAL INDEX 



TO THE 



POETRY OF MILTON. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

The following Index will be found applicable 
to every edition of Milton's Poetical Works, whether 
publifhed as an entire or partial collection ; the cir- 
cumftance which refpects only the jirji edition of 
Paradife Loft, its appearance in ten books and the 
fubfequent divifion of thofe ten into twelve, being 
remembered. 

The explanation of the letters and figures ufed 
in this Index is as follows. The figures i, ii, iii, &c» 
refer to the refpective books of Paradife Loft and 
Paradife Regained. The figures 1, % 3, &c. refer to 
the lines of each book, or of each poem, according 
to their feveral defcriptions. The letters thus. 

THE ENGLISH POEMS. 

P. L. fignify ~— — « Paradife Loft. 

P. -R. Paradife Regained* 

S. A. Samfon Agonijies. 

Lye. Lycidas. 

UAL U Allegro. 

II Perf II Penferofo. 

Arc. Arcades. 

Com. Comus. 

Son. i, ii. &c. Sonnets. 

Od. Nat. Ode on the Morning of Chrijfs 

Nativity. 

Od. Paff. Ode on the Paffion. 

Od. Cir. Ode on the Circumcijion. 

Od. D. F. I Ode on the Death of a Fat 

Infant. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

Od. on Time, fignify Ode on Time. 

Od. Sol. Muf. Ode at a Solemn Mufick. 

Ep. M. Win. Epitaph on the Marchionefs of 

Winchejler. 

Od. May-M. Ode or Song on May-Morning. 

Vac. Ex. Verfes at a Vacation Exercife. 

Ep. W. Sh. Epitaph on W. Shakfpeare. 

Ep. Hobf. I, II. The two Epitaphs on Hobfon. 

Fore, of Con. On the new Forcers of Con- 

fcience, &c. 

Od. Hor. Fifth Ode of Horace tranjlated* 

Brut. Brutus, &c. Tranjlated from 

Geojfry of Monmouth. 

Dante, \, II- Tranjlations of Dante. 

Ariofi. Tranjlation of Ariojlo. 

Hor. 1, II, III. Other Tranjlations of Horace. 

Eurip. Tranjlation of Euripides. 

Soph. Tranjlation of Sophocles. 

Sen. Tranjlation of Seneca. 

Pf. i, ii, Sec. Tranjlation of Pj alms. 

THE GREEK POEMS. 

Pf. cxiv. Tranjlation of Pfalm cxiv. 

Phil, ad Reg* Philofophus ad regem quendam, 

&c. 
In Eff. In Effigiei Ejus Sculptor em. 



THE LATIN POEMS. 

EL i, ii. &o Elegiarum Liber. 

Add. El. vii. Additio Elegit vii, 

Ep. P. B. ij ii, Sec. Epigrammata in Proditioneoc 

Bombardicam. 
Ep. I. B. Epigramma in Inventor an Bom« 

barda. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Ad Leon, \, ii, iii. 


fignify Epigrammata ad Leonoram 




Roma canentem. 


In Salm. H. 


In Salmafii Hundredam. 


In Salm. 


In Salmafium. 


In Mor. 


In Morum. 


Apol. 


Apologue de Ruftico et Hero, 


Ad Chr. 


Ad Chrijiinam, Suecorum Re* 




ginam. 


In Ob. Pr. 


In Obitum Procancellarii. 


hi Quint. Nov, 


In Quintum Novembris. 


In Ob. Pr. EL 


In Obitum Prafulis Elienfis* 


Nat. &c. 


Naturam non patifenium. 


De Id. PI. 


De Idea Platonicd, &c. 


Ad Pair. 


Ad Patrem. 


Ad Salf. 


Ad Saljillum. 


Man/. 


Manfus. 


Epit. Da. 


Epitaphium Damonis. 


Ad J. Ro. 


Ode ad Joannem Roufmm* 



THE ITALIAN POEMS, 

Son. ii, iii, &«. Sonnets. 

Can. Canzone, 



A VERBAL 



INDEX 



TO THE 



POETRY OF MILTON. 



AA&ON, P. L. xii. 170. 
Aaron's, P. L. iii. 598 ; P. R. 

iii. 15. 
Abaddon, P. L. iv. 624. 
abandon, P. L. vl 494. 
abandon'd, P. L. vi. 134* x. 

717; S. A. 120. 
Abarim, P. L. i. 408. 
abafh'd, P. L. i. 331, iv. 846, 

viii. 595, ix. 1065, x. l6l ; 

P. R. ii. 224, iv. 195 ; Pj\ 

vi. 124. 
Abaffin, P. L. iv. 280. 
abate, P. P. ii. 455. 
abated, P, P. xi. 841. 
Abbana, P. L. i. 469* 
Abdiel, P. L. v.. 805, 896, vi. 

Ill, 171,369* 
abhor, P.-L. iv. 392, v. 120, 

xi. 686; P.P. iv. 172. 
abhorr'd, P. L. ii. 659, vi. 607 ; 

Pore, of Con. 4 ; P/. iii, 22. 
abhorred, P. L. ii. 87, 577 ; 

P. L. iv. 191 ; iyc. 75 ; Cow. 

535. 
abhorr'ft, P. L. xii. 79- 
abide, P. i. i. 385, iv. 87, v* 

609; S.A. 922, 1136; Com. 

951 ; Or/. Nat. 225 ; Od. P^I 

20; Pf. i. 13. 
abides, P.L. iii. 38S, xi. 292. 
ability, S. A. 743. 
abjeft, P. L. i. 312, 322, ix. 

572, xi. 520; S.A. 169. 
abjure, P. L. viii. 480; P. ii. 

i. 474. 



able, P. L. iii. 211, iv. 155, r«. 
70, x. 819, 950, xii. 491 ; 
R. R. iii. 365; Od. Sol. Muf. 
4. 

abode, P. i. iii. 734, iv. 939, 
vii. 553 ; Com*693; Od. Nat. 
18; Od. D.F.I. 60 ; Pjl 
lxxxi. 37 ; lxxxiv. 39. 

abolifli, P. L. ii. 370, iii. 163, 
ix. 947. 

abolifh'd, P. L. ii. 93- 

abominable, P. L. ii. 626, x. 
465 ; P. P. iv. 173 ; S. A. 
1359. 

abominations, P. L. i. 38£; 
P. P. iii. 163. 

abortive, P. L. ii. 441, iii. 456, 
xi. 769; P.P. vt.*ll',S.A. 
1576. 

above, P. L. i. 15, 39, 193, 
249,499, £89, 600, ii. 172, 
351, 428, 455, 731, 814, 
856, iii. 58, 184, 268, 416, 
556, 571, iv. 141, v. 156, 
297, 363 , 455, 812, vi. 402, 
705, vii. 3, 4, 23, 82, 268, 
389, 468, viii. 135, 168, 
318,357,358, ix. 105,228, 
564, x. 149, 176, 532, 549, 
xi. 2, 232, 298, 829, xii. 
65,77,458; P. P. i. 15, 81, 
206, 232, 274, ii. 70, iii. 
116, iv.39,48; S.A. 62, 63, 
556, 986, 1052, 1294; Lye, 
178; // Pen/, (prep.) 20, 
J52 ; Com. 5, 1003 \ Od. Nat, 



VOL. I, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



4; Od.Cir, 18; Od. D.F.I. 

35, 39; Vac. Ex. 34-, 80; 

Ff. viii. 3, cxxxvi. 94. 

from above, P. L. iii. .55, iv. 
860, vii. 118,xi. 138,668; 
P. It. i. 496, i v. 289; S.A. 
199, 66' 4. 
abound, P. L. vi. 502, xii.478. 
abounded, F. L. in. 312. 
abounds, P. L. iii. 312. 
about, P. L. i. 770, ii. 348, iii. 

60, iv. 401, v. 656, vi. J65, 

vii. 197, viii. 62, 125, 26l, 

559, ix. 16, 120, 427, 589, 

SI 6, 1048, 1057, 1106, x.26, 

420, 423, xii. 136; P. R. i. 

34, 489, ii- 98, iv. 16; S.A. 

483, 530, 6'75, 727, 1501, 

1747; U Pen/. 152 ; Cow. 

146,153,167,647,983,990; 

Oc/. on Time, 17; Pac. £x. 

23, 63; Ff. iii. 17. 
Abraham, P. L. xii. 152, 260, 

268,273,328; P.R. iii. 434; 

5. ^. 465. 
Abraham's, P. L. xii. 447, 449 ; 

S. A. 29. 
abroad, P. L. ii. 463; P. ii. iv. 

414; S.^. 809, 919; PA 

lxxxvi. 43, lxxxvii. 10, 

cxxxvi. 5. 

all abroad, S. A. l600. 
abrupt, P. L. ii. 409. 
abruptly, P. P. ii. 10. 
abfence, P.L. v. 110, vii. 107, 

ix. 248, 294-, 861 ; P. P. ii. 
100; S. A. 806. 
abfent, P. L. iii. 261, viii. 229, 

x. 32 ; P. R. iv. 400, 440; 

5 ■/. 1604 ; Lye. 35. 
abfents, P. L. ix. 372, x. 108. 
abfolve, P. L. Ki. 291, x. 829. 
abfolv'd, P.L. vii. 94. 
abfoiute, P. L.ii. 560, iii. LIS, 

iv. 301, viii. 421, 547, *. 

483, xi. 311; xii. 68; P. H. 
i). 138; S.A. 1405. 
abfolutely, P. L. ix. 1156. 



abftain, P. L. iv. 748, vii. 120, 
x. 557,99^; P. P. ii.269. 

abftain'd, P. L. ix. 1022. 
abitaining, P. R. iii. 192. 
abftemious, 6'. A. 637- 
abstinence, P. L. ix. 924 ; Com. 

709. 
abftracl, P. L. viii. 462. 
abftraded, P. L. ix. 463. 
abftrufe, P. L. viii. 40; S. ,4, 

1064. 
abftrufeft, P.L. v. 712. 
abfurd, S. A. 1337. 
abundance, P. L. iv. 730, v. 72, 

315, vii. 388, ix. 620; Com. 

764. 
abundantly, P. L. viii. 220. 
abufe, P. L. iv. 204, v. 800. 
abuie, (verb) P. L. i. 455 ; S. A. 

76, 1354. 
abus'd, P.L.'u 479. 
abyfs, P. L. i. 21, 658, ii. 405, 

518, 910, 917, 956, 969, 

1027, iii. 83, 936, vii. 211, 

234, x. 314, 371, 476, 842, 

xii. 555; S. A. 501. 
Academe, P. R. iv. 244. 
Academicks, P. R. iv. 278. 
acanthus, P.L. iv. 696. 
Accaron, P. L. \. 466. 
accent, P. L. ii. 118 ; ix. 321 ; 

Son. xiii. 3. 
accept, P.L. ii. 58, 425, 452, 

iii. 302, iv. 380, ix. 6*29, *. 

758, xi. 37, 505; P. R. ii. 

3.98; S.A. 1179, 1255, 

1460. 
acceptable, P. L. x. 139, 855 ; 

S. A. 1052 ; Son. 2. 
acceptance, P. L. v. 531, viii. 

435, x. 972, xi. 457, xii. 

305; P. R. ii. 388; Ff. vi. 

19. 
accepted, P. L. v. 465, vi.804, 

xi. 46. 
accepting, P. R. iv. 493. 
accepts, 6'. A. 510. 
accefc, P. L. i. 76 J, ii, 130, iv. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



I3!T, ix. 310, 511, 810, xii. 

239; P. R- i. *92; Pf. 

lxxxvi. 23. 
acceffible, P. L. iv. 546. 
accefibries, P. L. x. 520. 
accident, P.il.39; S.A. 1519, 

1552; Vac. Ex. 74. 
accidents, S. A. 6l2. 
acclaim, P.L. ii. 520, iii. 397, 

x. 455. P.R. ii. 235. 
acclamation, P. L. vii. 558. 
acclamations, P.L. vi. 23; P/. 

lxxxi. 4. 
accompanied, P. L. iv. 600, v. 

352, viiK 428, x. 88, 848 ; 

P.R.i. 300. 
accomplish, P. ii. ii. 113, 

452. 
accom.plish'd, P. L. iii. l60,iv. 

660, vii. 550; S.A. 230. 
accpmplifhing, P. L. xii. 56Y. 
accomplishment, P. il. ii. 207. 
accord, P.L. ii. 236; P..R. iii. 

9; S..-4. 1643. 
•accord, (verb) P.L. ii. 503. 
according, P.L. vi. 81 6, x. 5 17, 

806; Com. 766; P/. vii. 32, 

62. 
accoft, P. L. iv. 822. 
accofts, P. L. iii. 653 ; P. R. 

iii. 6. 
account, P. L. iii. 238, iv. 235, 

622, S41, vi. 726. x. 501 ; 

P. JR. ii. 193; Son. xix. 6. 
accountable, P, L. ii. 255, x. 

accurs'd, P.L. ii. 1055, iv. 69, 
v. 877, vi. 850, x. l68, 175, 
465, 723, xii. 413; P. H. iv. 
179; 5.^.930. 

accufation, P. L. ix. 1187. 

accufe, P.L. iii. 112, iv. 67, 
viii. 56l, ix. 1186, x. 127, 
xii. 37; P.R. iv. 3l6; Arc. 
10. 

accus'd, P. L. x. 164, 852. 

accuier, P. L, iv. 10, ix. 
1182, 



accuftom'd, P. L. iv. 779, xi. 

2S5 ; 11 Pen/. 60. 
Acheron, P. L. ii. 578 ; Com, 

604. 
achieve, P. L. xii. 234 ; P. #. 

i. is. 

achieved, P. L. ii. 21, 363, 723, 

x. 368, 469, xi. 698, 792 ; 

P.R. ii. 411; S. A. 1492. 
achieving, P. L. ix. 696. 
Achilles, P. L. ix. 15. 
acknowledge, P. L. v, 172, vii. 

512, viii. 574, xii. 573; 

P.R. ii. 376; S.A. 448, 

1170. 
acknowledg'd, P. L. iv. 956, x. 

939, xi. 612; P. it. ii. 83; 

S. A. 245. 
acquaint, P. L. x. 395 ; Ep. 

M. Win. 72. 
acquift, S. A. 1755. 
acquit, S. A. 897. 
acquittance, P. L. x. 53. 
acquitted, x. 827. 
aft, P.L. ii. 109, 363, iv. 94, 

ix. 190, 668, 674, x. 1, 334, 

390, xi. 256, xii. 427, 429; 

S.A. 28, 231, 1362, 1388; 

Com. 465. 
a&, (verb) P. L. vii. 172, x. 

807, xii. 517; S.A. 503. 
a&ion, P. L. iv. 401, ix. 46*0 ; 

P. R. iv. 215. 
actions, P. L. viii 602, ix. 559, 

x. 608; P.R. ii.411, iii. 9, 

239, iv. 266 ; S. A. 1440. 
adive, P).L.y. 477, ix. 9^; P-R* 

ii. 239", iv. 37 1* 
a&ivity, 5. A. 1328. 
ads, P. L. v. 593, vi. 264, 377, 

883, vii. 176, 601, viii. 600, 

x. 1026, xi. 7S9; P. JR. i. 

216, ii. 412, iii. 24; S.A. 

243, 527, 1101, 1210, 1368, 

1736 ; Son. viii. 6 ; Od. PaJ. 

24; Pf. lxxxviii. 50. 
Adam, P.L. iv. 323, 408, GlO, 

742, v, 3, 27, 94, 230, 29P, 



a 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

302,307,321,358,372,453, Adiabene, P. R. iii. 320. 

4.69, 56*1,751, vii. 42,45,59. adjoin'd, P. L. iv. 449; P. & 

109, 524, viii. 51, 179, 296*, i. 403. 

401, 437, 594, 644, 653, ix. adjourn, P. L. xii. 264. 

205,226,289,290,318,342, adjudg'd, P.L. iii. 223, iv. 823, 

816, 828, 831, S38, 856, 888, x. 377 ; S. A. 288. 

960, 965, 988, 1004, 1016, adjure, Fore, of Con. 5. 

1065,1132, 1144, 1162, x. adjurd, S.A.^53. 

102, 103, 115, 124,197,715, adjuring, Com. 868. 

736, 845, 914, 9^9, 967, adjufted, P.L. vi. 514. 

1010, xi. 114, 136, 191, 223, admiration, P. L. iii. 271, 672, 

224,249,251,263,293,335, vii, 52, ix. 8/2; P. R. h. 

370,419,423,448,454,495, 221. 

526,596,628,674,754, 86'S, admire, P. L. i. 690. viii. 25, 

xii. 4, 63, 270, 372, 552, 75; P.P. i. 326, 380,482, 

607, 624 ; P. R. i. 51, 102, ii. 222, iii. 52 ; Od. Hot. 8. 

ii. 133, 134, iv. 607, 6*14. admir'd, P. L. ii. 677, 678, vi. 

fecond Adam, P.L. xi. 383. 498, ix. 444, 542, 746, xi. 

Adam's, P. L. iii. 285, 286, 689 5 P. P. i. 214 ; S.^/. 530. 

734, viii. 1, 64, ix. 591, xi. admires, P. R. iii. 39. 

212, 412 ; P. P. 115. admiring, P. P. i. 681, 731, ix. 

adamant, P. L. ii. 436, vi. 110, 524, 1178, x. 352 ; P. R. i. 

255, x. 318 ; P. It. iv. 534. 169, ii. 175. 

adamantean, S. A. 134. admir'ft, P. L. viii. 567. 

adamantine, P.L. i. 48, ii. 646, admit, P. X. viii. 6*37, x. 76'3, 

853, vi. 542. Arc. 66. xi. 141, 596 ; 5'. ^. 605. 

add, P. L. ii. 700, iv. 36, 950, admits, P. R. i. 95. 

v. 152, viii. 109, ix. 821, xii. admitting, P. L. viii. 115. 

581,582, 583; P.P. iv. 113; admoniih, P. L. xi. 813. 

£. .4. 1120, 1357; IlPenf. admonifh'd, P.L. iii. 647, ix. 

49; Com. 858. 1171. 

added, P. L. iv. 845, vii. 484, admonifhment, P. L. vii. 77- 

x. 753, 909, xi. 138, 263 ; Adonis, P. I, i. 450, ix. 440 ; 

P. P. i. 497, iv. 550 ; Ep. M. Com. 999- 

Win. 5. adopted, P. L. v. 218. 

adder, P. L. ix. 625. adoration, P. L. iii. 34%, iv 

adders, S. A. 936*. 737, V. 800, viii. 315. 

addifted, P. P. iv. 214. adore, P. L. i. 323, 373, 375, 

adding, S. A. 1351. iii. 342, 343, iv. 89, vii. 514, 

addition, P. L. v. Il6, vii. 555. viii. l>80, 360, 6*47, ix. 540, 

addrefs, P.L. v. 868 ; S. A. xi. 333; S. A. 1177; Arc. 

731, 37 ; P/: Ixxxvi. 42. 

••Is'd, P.P.vi.296 : ix.496, ador'd, P.L. i. 384, iv. 721, 

672, 855, xi. 295 ; P. R. ii. 959, v. 805, ix. 547 ; P. R. 

301 ; S. ^/. 729; Corn. 272. 11. 1S9, 212. 

adhere, P. L. ii. 906, mh. 498. adorers, P. /,. ix. 143 ; P. R. i. 

adherents, I'. L. vj. 266, x. 4. 1. 

iidoring, P.P.- v. Ml 



VERBAL INDEX. 



adorn, P. L. v. 218. viii. 576, 

ix. 840. 
adorn'd, P. L. i. 371, ii. 446, 

1049, iii. 550, iv. 634, vi. 

474, vii. 87, 384, viii. 482, 

ix. 393, 1030, x. 151, xi. 

280; P. P. ii. 137, iv. 35; 

S. A. 357, 679. 

more adorn'd, P. L. iv. 713. 
adorns, P. i>. vii. 445. 
Adramelech, P. L. vi. 365. 
Adria, P. L. i. 520. 
adrift, P. L. xi. 832. 
advance, P. L. ii. 682, v. 191, 

vi. 234, viii. l63, ix. 148, x. 

616, xii. 215; P. P. i. 88, 

iii. 143, 144. 
advanc'd, P. L. i. 11 9, 536, 

563, iv. 90, 359, v. 588, 744, 

vi. 109, 399, 884, vii. 626, 

xii. 632; P. R. ii. 69 ; S.A. 

136, 450; Cow?. 1004; Pf. 

lxxx. 44. 
advancing, P. _L. v. 2. 
advantage, P. P. i. 327, ii- 35, 

987, viii. 122, ix. 258, 718; 

S.A. 1118, 1259- 

no advantage, P. R. ii. 234. 
advantaged, P. P. iv. 208 ; S. A. 

255. 
advantages, P. L. vi. 401, xii. 

510; S.^. 1401. 
advantageous, P. L. ii. 363. 
adventurous, P. X. i. 13, ii. 

615, vi. 66. ix. 921, x. 255. 

Com. 79. 
adventure, P. L. ii. 474, 571, 

x. 468. 
adventurer, P. L. x. 440. 
adventures, S.A. 1740. 
adverfary, P. L. ii. 629, iii. 81, 

156, vi. 282, ix. 947, x. 906 ; 

P. R. i. 33, iv. 527. 
adverfary-ferpent,P.L. xii.312. 
adverfe, P. L. i. 103, ii. 77, 

259- vi. 206, 490, vii. 239, 

x. 289, 701, xi. 364; P. JR. 

iii. 189; S.A. 1040. 



adverfe, 5. A. 102. 
adverfities, P. P. iv. 479, 
advice, P. L. ii. 197, v.- 88.9; 

P. 71. i. 394, iii. 36*4; Com. 

108. 
advife, P. L. ii. 42, 283, 376, 

v. 234, 729, $88, ix. 212, 

xii.6ll;P.P.iv. 211;«S'.^. 

328 ; Son. xxvii. 7 J -Eur. 2 ; 

P/I lxxxi. 55. 
advis'd, P. X. v. 523, vi. 674 ; 

P.P. ii. 152. 
adviling, P.L.u. 292. 
adulterers, Dante II. 4. 
adulterous, P. L. iv. 753* 
adultery, P. P. xi. 717- 
advocate, P. L. xi. 33. 
aduft, P. X. xii. 635. 
/Egean, P. L. i. 746 ; P. P. iv, 

238. 
jEnon, P. P. ii. 21. 
-ffiolian, P. R. iv. 257- 
aereal, P. L. iii. 445, v. 548, 

vii. 442, x. 667 ; Com. 3. 
aery, P. L. i. 430, 775, ii. 407, 

536, iii. 741, iv. 568, v. 4, 

105, vi. 283, vii. 246, 428, 

xi. 1S5; P.P. iv. 57, 402; 

S. A. 974 ; II. Pen/. 148 ; 

Cow. 208. 231 ; Od. Nat. 103. 
aery-light, P. L. v. 4. 

more aery, P. P. v. 4SL 
JEtna, P. L. i. 233. 
Etna's, P. P. iii. 470. 
Afer, P. L. x. 702. 
affable, P. L. vii. 41, viii. 648. 
affairs, P. L. x. 408. 
affVa, P. P. vi. 421, x. 653 ; 

P. P. iii. 45 ; S. A. 1030. 
affecting, P. L. iii. 206, v. 763, 

xii. 81; P.P. iii. 22. 
affeftion, 5'. A. 739. 
affe&s, P. L. \.97; Com. 386. 
affirm, P. L. v. 107 ; viii. 117 5 

Ep. Hobf. II. 13. 
affirming, P. P. i. 253. 
afflia, P. P. i. 425 ; S.A. 114, 

914, 1252. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



afflicted, P.L. i. 186, iv. 939, 
vi. 852, x. 863; P. 12. ii. 93 ; 

5.^. 6*60 ; Pf. lxxxvin. 61. 
afflicting P. L. ii. 166. 
afflidion, P. L. i. 57 ; SU- 457, 

503, 1257 ; Pf lxxxvii. 37- 
afflictions, P. 7?. ii. 92. 
afffilts, P. L. xi. 315 ; S.A. 195. 
afford, P. L. iv. 46, v. 3 16, ix. 

9i2,x.27i;6'.^.9lO,H09; 

0</. .Mrf. 16" ; Pf. lxxxv. 27, 

Ixxxvi. 19, 61. 
affords, P. L. ix. 968. 
affright, Com. 148, 356. 
affrighted, P. L. vi. 869. 
affrights, Od. Nat. 194. 
affront, P. L. ix. 302 ; P. i?. 

iv. 444; 5'. A. 531. 
affront (verb) P. L. i. 391. 
affronts, P. L. ix. 328 i P. R. 

lii. l6l. 
afield, Xyc. 27- 
afloat, P. L. i. 305. 
afraid, P. L. ii. 759> x. 117, 

xii. 493. 
afrefh, P.L. ii. 801. 
Africk, P. L. i. 585. P. It. ii. 

347. 
Africa, P.fl.ii. 199 ; Com.606. 
African, P. R. iii. 101 ; Son. 

xvii. 4. 
after, P. L. i. 319, 476, 631, 

ii.228, 290, iii. 161, vi. 866, 

vii. 131, 311, viii. 343, 555, 

ix. 48, 87, 102, 918, 1028, 

x.332, 363, 828, 985, xi. 62, 

173, 1S4, 573,846, 856, xii. 

131, 194, 436; P. R. ii. 7, 

41, 151, 243, 275, iv. 402, 

436, 56'9 ; S. A. 337, 526, 

583, 104, 1356, 1651 ; Arc. 

72; Com. 10, 48, 687, 1006; 

Son. xii. 7, xxi. 6 ; Od.Nflt. 

236; Or/. /}. /•'. /. 60; £/>. 

jl/. JTjji. 9, 49, 64; Pf. 

rxiv. 2, 

after-age, Son. xiii. 7. 

after-Lands, P. L. ix. 761. 



afternoon's, P. L. ix. 403. 

after-times, P. L. iii. 529. 

again, P. L.ii. 82, 173, vi. 842, 
vii. 26l, 339, ix.910, 1000, 
xi. 883, 893; P. R. i. 259, 
ii. 41, iii. 145, iv. 537; S.A. 
212,584,731,758,931,946, 
1128,1355, 1496; Com. 486, 
699 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 25 ; Pf 
iii. 13, lxxxv. 22. 

againft, P. L. i. 42, 667, ii. 28, 
63, 72, 202, 320, 463, 693, 
728,730,751,853,992, iii. 
179, 205, iv. 41, 71, 542, 
817, 856,942, v. 662, 885, 
vi. 31, 136, 180, 426, 454, 
455, 636, 796, 813, 820, 906, 
vii. 202, 614, viii. 533, ix. 
299, 350, 728, 998, x. 43, 
275, 882, 926, 931, 1035, 
1045, xi. 218,311, 312,721, 
801,809, 810, xii. 289,416, 
493, 494, 529 ; P- -R- i. 10, 
114, 178, 317, ii- 90, iii. 301, 
324, iv. 18, 559, 603; S.A. 
244,319,391,476,548,559, 
640, 802, 890, 937; L'Al. 
135 , Com. 99, 1 59, 582, 586, 
600, 782, 808 ; Son. xxii. 7 ; 
Pf. ii. 5, v. 32, Ixxx. 20, 
Ixxxi. 59, lxxxiii. 9, 19, 
Ixxxvi. 49. 

agape, P. L. v. 357. 

agate, Com. 893. 

age, P.L.i.698, ix. 44, xi. 538, 
665, 809, xii. 243 ; P. R. i. 
16, 209, ii. 209, iv. 380; 
S.A. 69, 336, 571, 580, 700, 
925, 1487, 1488, 1489; U 
Penf 101, 167; Cow. 40, 59, 
109; Sou, xi. 12, xii. 1 ; Od. 
Nat. 135 ; Vac. Ex.69 ; £/'. 
W. Sh.'l. 

age to age, Pf. lxxxv. 20. 

aged, P.R.i.3U,S.A.156&; 
If A!. 82; 0d. Nat. lG'O ; 
Pf. lxxxiii. 53. 

ageuts, P. L. ix. 683. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ages, P. X. ii. 186, iii. 328, vii. 
191, x. 647, 733, xi. 326*, 
767, xii. 549 ; P. P. i. 48, 
ii. 441, iii. 294; S.A. 765, 
1706. 

aggravate, P. X. iii. 524, x. 
549; P- £.218; S.A. 1000. 

aggravations, 5. *4. 779- 

aggregated, P. X. x. 293. 

aghait, P. X. ii. 6l6; P.P. i. 
43 ; Od. Nat. 160 ; Pf. cxiv. 
15. 

agitation, P. X. ix. 637- 

agony, P. X. ii. 86l, ix. 858, 
xi. 482. 

Agra, P. L. xi.391. 

agreeable, S. A. 1506. 

Agrican, P.P. iii. 338. 

ah, P. X. iv. 42, 366, x. 822. 

Ahab, P. P. i. 372. 

Ahaz, P. X. i. 472. 

Ajalon, P. X. xii. 266. 

aid, P. X. i. 13, 38, iii. 232, 
727, iv. 927, vi. 119, 294, 
335, vii. 140, viii. 459, 6*42, 
ix. 260, 308, x. 271, 919, 
944, xi. 651, 800, xii. 542; 
P. R. i. 393, ii. 148, iii. 302, 
iv. 371, 468,493. 

aid, (verb) P. X. i. 235, ix. 
208; S.A. 1146; Com. 90, 
856 ; Vac. Ex. 15;Pf. lxxxiii. 
32, lxxxvi. 22. 

aided, P. X. vi. 38. 

aidlefs, Com. 574. 

aids, P. P. iii. 392. 

aim, P. X. i. 41, 168, ii. 28, 
128, 712; S.A. 1464. 

aim, (verb) P. P. iv. 105, 
106. 

aim'd, P. X. vi.317; P. P. ii. 
202, iv. 208. 

aims, P. X. iv. 808. 

aim'it, P. &. xi. 884. 

air, P. L. i. 226, 5l6, 545, 595, 
767, ii. 309, 400, 528, 540, 
594, 663, 718, 842, 912, 
1045, iii. 72, 76, 254, 429, 



489,564,619,715, iv. 153, 
432,558,082,722,818,940, 
1000, v. 79, 180, 270,417, 
590, vi. 72, 244., 304, 349, 
5S7, 654, 664, vii. 14, 89, 
24 ] , 26*5 , 42 1 , 43 1 , 447, 502, 
521, 533,560, 629, viii. 141, 
166,284,301,341,348,370, 
476, 626, ix. 446, 459, 530, 
658, x. 185, 188, 212, 280, 
400, 666, 847, 1073, 1090, 
1102, xi. 53, 183, 202, 284, 
337, 542, xii. 76, 452, 
454, 579, 635 ; P. R. i. 4, 
45,63, 366,499, ii. 74, 117, 
124,374, iv. 41, 201, 239, 
542,585; S.A.S, 176,628, 
162 1 , 1 640 ; Lye. 98 ; 11 Per/. 
77, 94; Com. 4, 133, 154, 
481, 557, 730, 757, 928, 
980; Son. viii. 12, xiii. 8, 
xx. 12; Od. Nat. 38, 99, 
l6±;0d.Paf.2;0d.D.F.I. 
16; Vac. Ex. 41. 

airs, P. L. iv. 264, viii. 515, 
ix. 200, x. 93 ; P. R. ii. 362 ; 
Od. Puff. 27. 

ake, Pf. vi. 5. 

alabalter, P. L. iv. 544 ; P. P. 
iv. 548 ; Com. 660. 

alack, Od. D. F.I. 28. 

alacrity, P. L. ii. 1012. 

Aladule, P. X. x. 435. 

alarm, P. X. vi. 549, x. 491. 

alarm, (verb) P. L. ii. 103. 

alarm'd, P. X. iv. 985, xii. 217. 

alarms, Com. 364. 

alas, P. X. x. 949, xi. 46l 
P, P. ii. 30, 348, iv. 309 
S. A. 162, 368 ; Lye. 64 
Com. 609 Orf. a>, 12 ; 0d 
D. F.I.7; Ep. M. Win. 8 
Ep. Hobf. I. 2 ; P/ lxxxviii. 
15. 

Albracca, P. P. iii. 339. 

Alcairo, P. X. i. 718. 

Alceftis, Son. xxiii. 2. 

alchemift, P. X. v. 440. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



alchemy, P. L. ii. 517. 

Alcidcs, P. L. 11. 542 ; P. R. 
iv. 5^5. 

Alcinous, P.L. v. 341, ix.4-11; 
Vac. Ex. 49. 

ale, UAL ICO ; £/>. Hobf. II. l6. 

Ak-ian, P. L. vii. 19- 

Alexander, P. R. iv. 252. 

Algarfifc, //Pew/ 111. 

Algiers, P. L. xi. 404. 

alien, P. L. iv. 57\;Pf. lxxxi. 
38. 

alienate, P. L. v. 877- 

alienated, P. L. i. 457, ix. 9, 
x. 378. 

alighted, P. L. iii. 422. 

alights, P. L. iv. 306". 

alike, P. L. ii. 187, 453, iii. 
593, iv. 70, 640, v. 407, vi. 
123, 847, viii. 389, x. 520, 
598, 838, xi. 350, xii.519; 
P. Ii. iii. 214; S. A. 703, 
704, 1074. 

alimental, P. L. v. 424. 

alive, P. L. xi. S18 ; S.A. 645 ; 
Pf. lxxxv. 24. 

all, P.L. x. 783, 792. 

all (adj.) P.L. i. 3, 18,3/, 6l, 
6*7, lOrJ, 136, 141,201, 217, 
257, 277, 314, 343, 350, 449, 
4 89, 518, 522, 544, 576, 582, 
586, 592, 600, 618, 632, 6'35 y 
719, 750, 761, ii. 49, 61, 
II?, 128,130,135,138,144, 
1? 1, 191, 193,238,283,286, 
354-, 366, 381 , 384, 388, 414, 
416, 120,437,464,465,467, 
476,483,519,565,591,5.97, 
608, 609, 6 1 3, 624, 625, 72:5, 
750,759,771,789,824,827, 
853, S75,oio, 913, 923,952, 
966, 983, 9*7, 999, i». 52, 
53, 58, 60, 87, ^J y 98, 100, 
122, 139, 171, 187,203,206, 
^17,230,241,246,258,277, 
290, 307, 317, 321, 376,328, 
330,336,941,346,344,374, 
390,448, 4-1.455,475, 



498, 543, 545, 554, 571,-593, 
616, 651, 658, 663, 665, 668, 
670, 674, 691, 702,703, iv. 
31,48,65,68,105, 109,130, 
156,177, 181,206,217,218, 
256, 27 1 , 286, 290, 341, 346, 
367, 383, 410,411, 412, 417, 
421,431,444,513,568,602, 
620, 639, 640, 658, 67 1 , 679, 
698,728,747,756,933,986, 
993, 1001, v. 28, 44, 103, 
107,136,142,164,197,247, 
253, 261, 272, 287, 323, 357, 
394,399,403,423,424,471, 
472, 497, 535, 586, 600, 60S, 
617, 62 1 , 631 , 647, 648, 64-9, 
669, 687, 692, 704, 730, 739, 
751 , 752, 753, 763, 767, 776, 
777,791,821,834,837,844, 
878, vi. 15,35,57, 140,143, 
147, 198, 218, 223, 244, 26] , 
264, 273, 327,334, 350, 351 , 
388,458,46*4,498,521,548, 
559, 567, 588, 623,630, 644, 
051 , 6*74,678, 704, 712, 7l6, 
720, 733, 754, 760, 800, 813, 
8 19, 821, 834, 838, 839,850, 
882, 905, vii. 49, 89, 92, 140, 
196,221,227,278,280,305, 
372, 47 8, 48 1 , 495, 45)9, 506, 
5 1 6, 522, 540, 541 , 548, 549, 
562, 593, 596, 597, viii. 19, 
24, 63, 135, 222/310, 317, 
33S, 357, 36l , 366, 37 1 , 391 , 
406,414,421,472,480,483, 
488, 494, 505, 531, 551, 556, 
575, 581 , 597, 6()2, 633, 637, 
643, ix. 46, 84, 86, 106, 108, 
109,110,113, 122,132,228, 
273,346,374,454,471,477, 

481, 557, 560, 569, 592, 604, 

605, 606, 645, 657, 658, 67S, 
719,728,776,783,784,802, 
814,832,891,893,897,941, 
1031, 1003, 1139, x. 23,28, 
42, 57,66, 83, 89, 134, 151, 
176, 178,202,227,259,1319, 
335,372,388,39$, 101,406,, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

420,422, 434, 452, 489, 493, 407, 445, 4?6, 494, 495, 533, 

619, 520, 532, 534, 600, 6*08, 530, 536*, 538, 541, 576', 590, 

i) J 2, 627, 644, 71 1, 728, 733, 595, 596, 6l2, 644, 6*48, 6*5T, 

738, 750, 794, 806, 817, 820, 655, 6*56, 717, 719, 750, 774, 

£25, 82S, 829, 833, 836, 838, 780, 795, 817, S34, 864, 871, 

540, 87 1,882, 883, S84, 911, 876, 879, 926, 938, 977, 
033, 935, 945, 949, 955, xi. 1018,1035,1050,1051, 1119, 
28, 34, 43, 46, 47,67, 77, 1136,1168,1247,1249,1290, 
111, 121, 122, 124, 129, 141, 1316,1341,1407,1449, 1482, 
150, 166, 168, 174, 189, 26*5, 1486,1492,1558,1559, 1572, 
266, 305, 335, 339, 344, 345, 1580,l607,l627,l645, 16*46, 
384,420,440,46*9,480, 482, 16*52,1656,1714, 1718, 1730, 

541, 562, 577, 589, 592, 602, 1736,1738,1745,1753, 1758 ; 
6*16,623,6*73,674,714,726', Lye. 99, 139, 141; IlPenf 
739, 747, 748, 753, 755, 76l, 33 ; Arc. 48, 55 $ 82 ; Com. 
781,798,806,824,826,828, 21,28, 30,72, 76, 115, 133, 
832, 86*2, 873, 878, 888, xii. 137, 217, 243, 283, 409, 463, 
58, 112, 126, 133, 138, 147, 603,605,615,640, 660,664, 
177,178,180,181,187,189, 66s, 686, 690, 714, 720, 
209, 243, 277, 325, 329, 341, 811, 8S3, 950, 955, 981, 9S7 ; 
440,446,450,455,458,464, Son. i. 2, vii. 13, x. 13, xii. 
470,490,499,501,509,520, 14, xiv. 5, xv. 3, xvii. 8, 
532, 555, 565, 576, 577, 578, xviii. 4, xxii. 12, xxiii. 9 ; 
580,581,585,596,6*18,621, Od. Nat. 31, 98, 207; 0d. 
627,641,646; P. R. i. 3, 5, Paf.34,; Od. Cir. 10; Od. 
6, 21, 40, 61, 68, 71 , 75, 92, D. F. I. 20 ; Od. Sol. Muf 
Ill, 123, 131, 152, 153, 16*3, 21 ; Vac. Ex. 44, 64 ; Ep» 
180,202,205,206,214,218, Hobf.ll. 11, 19, 33; Fore. 
258,273,371,382,387,416, of Con. 13; Pf. i. 10, v. 13, 
426, 430, 464, iL 47, 53, 31, 33, vi. 15, 16, 21, vii. 30, 
112, 118, 143, 147, 174, 192, viii. 6, 18, 19, 20, lxxx. 41, 
195, 197, 213, 219, 222, 283, Ixxxi. 3, 54, 59, lxxxii. 19, 
305,310,318,324,325,327, 21, 28, lxxxiii. 17, 18, 31, 
334, 344, 374, 379, 410, 430, 34, 56, lxxxi v. 27, lxxxv. 7, 
465, iii. 5, 18,28,29,30,39, 9, lxxxvi. 29, lxxxvii. 8, 
46, 63, 80, 111, 113, 114, lxxxviii. 26, 31,32, exxxvi, 
116,118,122,139,148,182, 85. See heaven, mankind, 
183,187,204,225,239,280, fides, things. 

282, 294, 300, 307, 326, 338, all in all, P. L. iii. 341 , vi. 732. 

351, 358, 418, 442, iv. 80, at all, P. L. ii. 48, ix. 757, 

88, 89, 96, 97, 105, 136, 148, xi. S9. 

150, 155, 162, 168, 176, 186, ail-about, Arc. 58. 

202, 223, 224, 225, 277, 293, all-bearing, P. L. v. 338. 

296, 302, 304, 307, 313, 315, all -bounteous, P. L. v. 6*40. 

334, 347, 352, 360, 379, 436, all-chearing, P. L. iii. 581. 

440, 443, 470, 494, 503, 510, all-commanding, Pf. exxxvi. 25. 

520, 533 ; S. A. 25, 44, 64, all- conquering, P. L. x. 591, 

f 1, 82, 84, 93, 96, 107, 374, all-giver, Com. 723. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



all gold, Od. Hor. 9. 
all-judging, Lye. 82. 
all-knowing, P. L. x. 227- 
all-powerful, P. L. ii. 851. 
all-ruling, P. L. i. 212, ii. 264. 
all-feeing, P.L. x. 6. 
all-to, Com. 380. 
all-woifhipt, Cotw. 719. 
allay, P. L. x. 564 ; S. A. 582 ; 

Com. 96. 
allay'd, P. L. vii. 67, viii. 7; 

P. it. ii. 160. 
allaying, S. A. 550. 
alleg'd, P.L. iv. 921. 
allege, S. A. 1253. 
allegiance, P.L. iii. 104, iv.956. 
allegorick, P.R. iv. 390. 
alley, Com. 311. 
alleys, P. L. iv. 626; P.R. ii. 

293 ; Com. 990. 
allotted, P. X. viii. 148 : P. #. 

ii. 123. 
allow, P. L. vi. 158. 
allowance, S.A. 770 ; Com. 308. 
allure, P. J*, i. 179, iv. 112; 

S. A. 546. 
allur'd, P. L. i. 447, iii. 573; 

v. 709, xi. 718. 
allurement, P. L. xi. 810 ; P. il. 

ii. 134, 409. 
alluring, P.L. ix. 588; Com. 882. 
allufion, P. X. x. 425. 
Almanfor, P. L. xi. 403. 
Amalthea's, P. ii. ii. 356. 
Almighty, P. X. i. 259, 623, iii. 

273, 344, v. 154, 46*9, 676, 

vi. 294, vii. 174, 339, viii. 

398, ix. 137, x. 6*13, xi. 83. 
almighty, (adj.) P. L. i. 44, 

144, ii. 6*5, 144, 15)2, 769, 

915, iii. 56, 386, v. 86*8, vi. 

316, 6*71, 713, 883, vii. 11. 

112, x.387- 
Almighty's, P. L. iv. 566, v. 

585, vi. 11.9, vii. 181. 
»lmoft, P. L. vii. 620, viii. 110 ; 

S. A. 91 J Pf lxxxiv. 5, 

xxxvi. 3. 



alms, Son. xiv. 5. 

aloft, P. L. i. 226, ii. Q38 y m, 
357, 493, 577, iv. 1014, vi.. 
252, 776, ix. 500. 

alone, P. L. ii. 426, 509, 778, 
975, iii. 169, 441, 442, 66*7, 
684,699, iv. 129,340, 491, 
917, 935, v. 50, 875, vi. 145, 
420, 820, vii. 28, viii. 57, 89, 
365, 405, 427, 438, 445, ix. 
105, 303, 336, 457, 480, 736, 
766, 978, xi. 222, xii. 404; 
P.R. i. 189, 285, iii. 141, 
372; iv. 217; 5.^.20,939; 
Arc. 17, 42 ; Com. 583, 101 9 ; 
Od. Nat. 107 ; Pf- iv. 20, 39, 
42, lxxxiii. 6, lxxxvi. 5. 

along, P.L.i. 100, ii. 574, iv. 
689, vi. 275, vii. 166, viii. 
166, x. 250; S.A. 13 16, 
1384, 1412; Com. 984; Od. 
Cir. 4 ; Vac. Ex. 94. 

aloof, P.L. i. 380; P.R. i. 
313; S.A. 135, 16*11. 

aloud, P.L. i. 126, iv. 2, 4S1, 
865, vi. 536, viii. 490, x. 102 ; 
S. A. 1639; Pya/. iii. 10, 
lxxxiv. 7' 

Alp, P. L. ii. 620 ; 6'. A. 628. 

Alpheus, Xyc. 132 ; Arc. 30. 

Alpine, Son. xviii. 2. 

already, P. L.vi. 20, vii. 151, 
viii. 85, 420, x. 50, 716, 905, 
929; S.A. 707, 1257; Com. 
573 ; Pf. vii. 47, Ixxxviii. 59. 

alfo, P. L. i. 442, 470, 497, 11. 
274, v. 57, 628, vi. 902, vii. 
Ill, 117,588, viii. 220, 543, 
ix. 750, 874, 881, 1178, x. 
361, 494, 795, xi. 94, 406, 
453, 757, 797, >ii. 223, 490 v 
574, 595, 611, P.R. i. 334, 
393; iv. 116, 159,227,440, 
560; S.J. 8, 778; Son. xix. 
14; Pf. lxxxv. 49. 

altar, P. L. i. 384, 431, 473, 
493, ii. 244, ix. 195, xi. 18, 
432, xii. 354 j P. )(. i. 257, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



489 ; S. A. 26 ; II Pen/. 48 ; 

Od. Nat. 28. 
altars, P. L. i. 384, 494, xi. 

323; Od. Nat. 192; Pf 

lxxxiv. 13. 
alter, P. L. x. 953. 
alteration, P. L. ii. 1024, ix. 

599. 
alter'd, P. L. v. 385, ix. 1132, 

x. 171. 
altern, P. L. vii. 348. 
alternate, P. L, v. 657. 
although, P. L. viii. 427; S. A. 

1338. 
always, P. L. i. 681, iii. 517, 

704, vi. 724, 725, ix. 467, 

xii. 84; P.R. iii. 48, 159; 

S.J. 814. 
amain, P. L. ii. 165, 1024. x. 

675, xi. 742; P. JR. ii. 430, 

S.A.637, 1304; Lye. 111. 
Amalec, Pf. lxxxiii. 26. 
Amalthea, P. L. iv. 278. 
Amara, P. L. iv. 281. 
amarant, P. L. iii. 352, 353. 
amaranthus, Lye. 149. 
amarantine, P. X. xi. 78. 
Amaryllis, Lye. 68. 
amaze, P. L. (fub.) vi. 646; 

P.R. ii. 38; S.J. 1645 ; 

Od. Nat. 69. 
amaze, P. L. (verb) xii. 496 ; 

Son. xv. 3. 
amaz'd, P.L. i. 281, iv. 820, 

ix. 614, 640, 889, x. 452 ; 

S.J. 1286; Com. 565. 
amazed, Pf. exxxvi. 14. 
amazement, i. 313, ii. 758, vi. 

198; P.R. i. 107; iv. 562; 

Com. 356. 
Amazonian, P.L. ix. 1111. 
amber, P. L. iii. 359, vi. 759 ; 

P. R. iii. 288 ; S. A. 720 ; 

L'AL 6l ; Com. 333. 
amber-dropping, Com. 863. 
ambient, P. L. vi, 481, vii. 89. 
ambiguous, P. L. v. 703, vi. 

568, vii. 473 ; P. H. i. 435. 



ambition, P. L. i. 202, ii. 4S5, 

iv. 40, 6l, 92, ix. 168, xii. 

38, 511; P.R. iii. 90; S.A. 

247- 
ambitious, P. L. i. 41, ii. 34, 

vi. 160, xii. 25 ; P. R. iv. 

137, 495; Vac. Ex. 11. 
ambrofia, P. £. v. 57. 
ambrofial, P. £. ii. 245, iii. 

135, iv. 219, v. 427, 642, vi. 

475, ix. 852, xi. 279 ; P. R* 

iv. 588, 590 ; Com. 16, 840. 
ambufh, P. L. ii. 344, ix. 408. 
amend, Pf. vi. 4. 
amends, P. L. viii. 491, x. 1032 ; 

S. A. 9, 7*5. 
amere'd, P. L. i. 609. 
American, P. L. ix. 1116. 
amiable, P.L. iv. 250, viii. 484, 

ix. 899 ; 0d. Hor. 10. 
amiably, P. L. iv. 479* 
amice, P. R. iv. 427. 
amid, P.L. iv. 186, 218, 578, 

vi. 664, vii. 48, 262, viii. 326, 

ix. 401, 594, xi. 671. 
amidfr, P.L. i. 791- "• ^63 s 

896, iii. 376, v. 264, 598, 
903 ; vii. 132, ix. 502, 66l. 
x. 33, xi. 820; P.R. i. 42, 
ii. 149, iv. 439, 570 ; S. A. 
443, 683; Com. 254, 549, 
777, 981, Pf lxxxiii. 45. 

amifs, S. A. 239 ; Com. 177. 
amity, P. L. iv. 376, viii. 426, 

x. 248. 
ammiral, P. L. i. 294. 
Amnion, P. L. iv. 277 ; -P/*. 

lxxxiii. 25. 
Ammonian, P. L. ix. 508. 
Ammonite, P. L. i. 396; S. A. 

285. 
ammunition, S. A. 1277' 
among, i. 364, 385, 771, ii. 68, 

352,423,469, 501, S67, iii. 

283, iv. 83, 396, 429, 510, 

754, v. 77. 102, 126, 212, 

248, 309, 652, 716, S04, 

897, 898, vi. 22, 112,312, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



487, 62S, 745, 835, 850, 
898, vii. 133, 459, 623, viii. 
44, 313, 383, 594, ix. 135, 
408, 437, 44S, 543, 547, 
1118, x. 100, 397,579, 614, 
708, xi. 100, 296\ 321, 719, 
xii. 57, 108, 247, 281, 284, 
286, 353, 481; P. R. i. 310, 
368, 413, 432, 445, ii. 6'S, 
154,443, iii. 58, iv. 73, 87, 
218, 511; S. A. 109, 540, 
*77y957, 1162, 1192, 1430, 
1529, 1586, l6ll, 1664, 
1675; //. Penf. 63; Com. 
11, 174, 629, 1007; Pf. 
Ixxx. 27, lxxxii. 3, lxxxvi. 
25, ixxx vii. l, lxxxviii. 18. 

amongft, P. L. iii. 565; Od. 
D. F. J. 49 ; Pf- cxiv. 12, 
cxxxvi. 34. 

amorous, P. L. i. 449, > v - 311, 
603, viii. 477, 518. ix. 1035, 
1045, xi. 584, 5cS6; P. R. 
ii. 158, 16'2 ; S. A. 393, 
1007 ; Son. i. 8 ; Od. Nat. 
50 ; Od. D. F. I. 5. 

Amorrcan, Pf. cxxxvi. 66. 

amphifbaena, P. L. x. 524. 

Amphitrite's, Com. 921. 

ample, P. L. i. 725; iii. 254, 
389, iv. 413, v. 393, vi. 255, 
vii. 577, viii. 258; P.P. iv. 82. 

ampler, P. L. ix. 876. 

ampleft, P. L. xi. 380 ; S. A. 
1011. 

amplier, P. L. xii. 544. 

amplitude, P. L. vii. 620 ; P. 
A. ii. 139- 

amply, P. L. viii. 362, x. 388. 

A m ram's, P. L. i. 339- 

amusM, P. L. vt. 581, 623. 

A my mono, P. />!. ii. [88. 

Anak, .V. .-/. 528, 1080. 

anarch, P. Zr. ii. 988'. 

anarchy, P. /,. ii. K<)(>, vi. S73, 
x. 283; P. R. ii. 471. 

anceitor, P. L. iv. (09, x. 735, 
xi. 546. 



anccftors, P. L. ii. 895. 
Anchifes', Com. 923. 
anchor, P. L. i. 206. 
anchors, P. L. ii. 289. 
ancient, i. 200, 739, ii. 346, 
394, 591,970,986, iii. 464, 
xi. 10, 11, 862; P.R. i. 4, 
ii. 121, 435, iii. 270, 281, 
428, iv. 251,268; S.A.653; 
Com. 314; Soji. xii. 2, xviii. 
6 ; Fitf\ Ex. 98. 
anciently, P. L. v. 723. 

Andrew, P. #. ii. 7. 

Andromeda, P. L. iii. 55Q. 
dngel, P. L. i. 125, ii. 991. ftf. 
622, 645, 682, 694, iv. 59, 
320, 712, 902, 926 , 946, v. 
385, 404, 435, 519, 849, vi. 
1,92, 152,594, vii. 110, viii. 
1, 53, 72, 181, 560, 618, 
652, ix. 276, 1081, x. 327, 
4+2, xi. 286, 421, 449, 598, 
635, 759, 762, xii. 201, 259, 
364, 485, 574, 637 ; P. R. 
ii. 274, 310, iii. 352 ; S. A. 
24, 361, 1431 ; Lye. l63 ; 
Com. 214, 658. 

arch-angel, i. 243, 593, 600, 
iii. 648, v. 660, 694, vi. 203, 
257, 594, vii. 41, xi. 23S, 
884, xii. 2, 466, 626. 

angel-forms, P. L. i. 301. 

angel-gueil, P. L. v. 328, ix. 1; 

angel-quire, Od. Nat. 27- 

angel trumpets, Od. Sol. Muf. 

11: 

traitor-angel, P. L. ii. 6*89- 
angel-wings, P. L. ix. 155. 
Angelica, P. R. iii. 441. 
angelical, P. L. ii. 548, iii. 462. 
angelick, P. L. iv. 550, 977, v. 

74,251, 371, 535,650, 834, 

vi. 308, 898, vii. 560, viii. 

559, ix. 142, 458, x. 18, xi. 

76 1 P. R. iv- 505, 593; & 
7. 672 j 0<f. AV//. 132. 
arch-angelick, P. />. xi. 126. 
angels, P. L. i 38, 59, 344, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



620, 734, ii. 68, 413, 1033, 
Hi. 331, 345, 396, 511,521, 
533, iv. 820, v. l6l, 288, 
46'5, 4^4, 5S4, 600, 633, vi. 
220, 281, 298, 336, 375, 
411, 525,638, 776, 802, vii. 
133, ix. 146, 308, 392, 548, 
937, x. 34, 650, 668, 893, 
xi. 70, 213, xii. 367 ; P. P. 
i. 129, 131, 163, 237, 243, 
371,447, ii. 385, iii. 63, 113, 
iv. 197, 200, 474, 557, 582 ; 
S. A. 343 ; Com. 455 ; Od. 
Nat. 244 ; Od. Pafj\ 4. 

arch-angels, P. L. iii. 325. 

anger, P. L. ii. 90, 15S, 211, 
iii. 237, 263, iv. 916, ix. 10, 
300, 1123, x. 114, 802, 945, 
xi.878; P.R. i.466; S. A. 
818, 963; Com. 667; Son. 
ix. 8 ; Pf. ii. 26, vi. 1. 

Angola, P. L. xi. 401. 

angry, P.L. i. 169, 741, ii. 152, 
x. 1095, xi. 330; Pf. lxxx. 
19, lxxxv. 17, 18, lxxxvi. 55. 

"anguifh, i. 558, ii. 567, vi. 340, 
'ix. 62, x. 1018, xi. 778 ; 
P.R. iv. 576; S.A. 458, 
600 ; Od. Paf}\ 42 ; Pf. vi. 5. 

animal fpirits, P. L. iv. 805, v. 
484, 

animals, P. L. iv. 621. 

animate, P.L. viii. 151, ix. 112. 

Anna, P. R. i. 255. 

annex'd, P. L. xii. 99- 

annihilating, P. L. vi. 347. 

announced, P. R. iv. 504. 

annoy, P. L. vi. 369, ix. 446 ; 
P. R. iii. 365 ; S. A.. 57S. 

annual, P. _L. i. 447, vii. 431, 
x, 576 ; S. A. 987. 

annujs, P. L. xii. 428. 

anointed, P. X. iii. 317, v. 605, 
664, 777, 870, vi. 676, 718, 
xii. 359; P.R. ii. 50; Pf. 
ii. 12, lxxxiv. 32. 

anon, P. L. i. 325, 549, 710, 
759, vi. 360, 564, xi. 433, 



661, 861, xii. 150; P.R. ii. 

285 ; Lye. 169 ; L'AL 131. 
another, P. £. ii. 292, 347, 570, 

1004, iv. 257, 459, v. 310, 

569, 77$, vi. 604, vii. 155, 

617, ix. 912, xi. 555, 637, 

756, 877 ; P. R. iii- 149, iv. 

27, 540; S.A. 330, 501, 

559, 56l, 1063, 1352 ; Vac. 

Ex. 54 ; Brut. 12 ; Dante II. 5. 
another's, P. L. xii. 528. 

one another's, P. L. iv. 506. 
anfwer, P. L. iii. 693, viii. 285, 

436, ix. 226, 552 ; P. R. i. 

467, ii. 172, iii. 181, 442; 

S.A. 1236, 1322; Lye. 96 ; 

Com. 276. 
anfwer, P.L. (verb) vii. 119, 

x. 862 ; P. R. iii. 146 ; S. A, 

1090 ; Od. Sol. Muf 18 5 Pf 

iv. 1, lxxxvi. 24. 
anfwerable, P. L. ix. 20, xii„ 

582 ; S. A. 6l5,. 
anfwer'd, P. L. i. 127, 272, ii. 

816,990, iv. 924, v. 94, 371, 

876, vi. 150, vii. 110, viii. 

217, 398, 412, 620, x. 67, 
115, 264, 383, 596, xi. 515, 

625; P.R. i. 357, ii. 322, 

392, iii. 386, iv. 170, 485; 

Com, 888 ; Pf lxxxi. 29- 
anfwering, Od. Nat. 97. 
anfw'ring, P.L. iv. 464, 834, 

vi. 450, 722, vii. 557 '• 
anfwers, P. R. i. 395, 434. 
Antaeus, P. R. iv. 563. 
antagonift, P. L. ii. 509, x, 

387; S.A. 1628. 
antar&ic, P. L. ix. 79. 
anthems, P. P. iv. 594; 1/ 
Penf 163 ; (W. JVttf._219. 
, antick, II Penf 158. 
anticks, S. A. 1325. 
antient, P. L. See ancient, 
Antigonus, P. /t. iii. 367- 
Antioch, P. P. iii. 297- 
Antiochus, P.P. iii. l6S. 
Antiopa, P. R. ii. 187. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Antipatcr, P. R. ii. 423. 
antipathy, P. L. x. 709. 
antique, UAL 128. 
antiquity, Com. 439- 
Anubis, Od. Nat. 212. 
annull'd, S. A. 72. 
anxious,P.L. viii. 185;£.^. 659. 
any, P. it. ii. 82 ; S. A. 4, 296' ; 

Com. 78, 273, 497 i PM 

lxxxvi. 26. 
Aonian, P. X. i. 15. 
apace, P. L. xii. 17 ; Lye. 129 ; 

Com. 657 ; #or. II. 3 ; Pf 

lxxx. 39. 
apart, P. £. ii. 557 % P. -R. i. 

229 ; S. A. 65 ; Pf. iv. 14. 
apathy, P. L. ii. 564. 
ape, P. L. viii. 396. 
apes, Son. xii. 4. 
Apocalyps, P. L. iv. 2. 
apology, P. L. ix. 854. 
Apollo, P. R. ii. 190 ; Cow. 

662 ; Od. Nat. 176 ; Od, D. 

F. I. 23, Vac. Ex. 37. 
Apollos, Com. 478. 
apoftacy, P. L. vii. 43. 
apoftafy, P. J*, i. 146. 
apoftate, P.L. i. 125, v. 852, 

vi. 100, 172, vii. 610. 
apoftates, P. L. vii. 44. 
apoftles, P. L. xii. 498. 
appaid, P. L. xii. 401. 
apparent, P. L. iv. 608, x. 112; 

P. R. ii. 397. 
apparition, P. L. viii. 293, xi. 

211; Com. 641. 
appear, P. X. ii. 15, 113, 257, 

643, 890, iii. 324, 380, iv. 

964, vii. 284, 285, 578, ix. 

817, xi. 306, 475, 609, 852, 

xii. 437, 540 ; P. R. i. 98, 

ii. 238, iii. 308 ; S. A. 902, 

1318, 1628; L'AL 125; Com. 

166, 867 ; Son, vii. 7, xxii. 

4; Od. Nat. 83; Pf. ii. 25, 

v. 8, lxxxiv. 28, lxxxv. 39. 
appearance, P. L. ix. 413 ; P. R. 

ii. 41 ; -S. ,4. 1090. 



appearances, P. L. viii. 82, xL 

329- 
appearM, i. 230, 476, 523, 518, 

592, ii. 418, iii. 105, 141, 

219, 504, iv. 149, 46l, v. 

586, vi. 79y 319, 524, 556, 

585, vii. 8, 193, 278, 3S3, 

463, 489, viii. 313, ix. 11 89, 

x. 106, 450, xi. 216, 320, 

478, 589; S.A. 1256. 
appearing, P. L. v. 265, ix. 

354 ; P. R. i. 249, iv. 99- 
appears, P. L. ii. 223, 533, 

1035, iii. 636, iv. 232, viii. 

30, ix. 110, 559, x. 885. xi. 

861, xii. 300; S.A. 822. 
appear'ft, P. R. iv. 193. 
appeafe, P. L. iii. 186, 406, v. 

846, x. 79, 792 , xi. 149, xii. 

298; S.A. 74,4. 
appeas'd, P. L. x. 226, xi. 257, 

880. 
appellant, S. A. 1220. 
appertain, P^Jb. xii. 230. 
appertains, P. X. vi. 815. 
appetence, P. L. xi. 619. 
appetite, P. L. iv. 330, v. 85, 

305, vii. 49, 127, 546, viii. 

308, ix. 580, 740, 1129, x. 

565, xi. 517; P. R. ii. 247, 

264, 409 ; Com. 705. 
Appian, P. R. iv. 68. 
applauded, P. L. vi. 26. 
applaufe, (fub.) P. J*, iii. 63. 
appiaufe, P. L. ii. 290, v. 873, 

x. 505, 545 ; Com. 259; Son. 

xxi. 2. 
apple, P. L. x. 487 ; P. #• ii. 

349. 
apples, P. L. ix. 585. 
apply, P. L. iv. 26'4, ix. 1019. 
apply 'd, P. L. v. 580, vi. 583, 

x. 172. 
appoint, P. L. v. 606. 
appointed, P. L. iii. 720, iv. 

619, 726, vi. 565, vii. 167, 

x. 421, xi. 550; S.A. 373, 

643, 1197: Pf lxxxi. 11. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

appoints, P. X. vi. 808. arbitrefs, P. X. i. 785. 

apprehend, P. X. v. 518, xii. arborets, P. X. ix. 437- 

280; 5. A. 1028 ; Cow. 784. arborous, P. X. v. 137- 

apprehended, P. X. ix. 574. arbour, P. X. v. 378, ix. 216. 

apprehenfion, P. X. viii. 354, arbours, P. X. iv. 626. 

xi. 775. Arcadian, P. X. xi. 132. 

apprehenfive, £. A. 624. Arcady, ^rc. 28, Com. 341. 

approach, P. X. iii. 42, iv. 154, arch, P. X. vi. 759* 

624, v. 359, vi. 256, ix. 191, arch. See angel, chemick, 

xii. 206; P. R. ii. 280. enemy, felon, fiend, foe. 

approach, (verb) P. X. iii. 382, arched, P. X. i. 726, vii. 438 ; 

iv. 563, vii. 173, viii. 546, S. A. 1634; II Penf. 133; 

ix. 535, xi. 12 L; P.P. i. Od. Nat. 175. 

284, 449, ii. 160 ; S. A. 951 ; archers, P. P. iii. 330; S. A. 

Arc. 82; Cow. 616. 1619. 

approach'd, P. X. iv. 874, v. arch-fiend, P. P. i. 357* 

627, ix. 491, x. 458, xi. 225. Archimedes, Son. xxi. 7. 

approaches, P. X. iv. 367. architect, P. X. i. 732, v. 256, 

approaching, P. X. vi. 552, viii. viii. 72, x. 356. 

.242, 350, x. 102, 864 ; Od. architects, P. R. iv. 52. 

Nat. 20. architrave, P. X. i. 715. 

approbation, P. R. iii. 6l. Ar&ick, P. X. ii. 410. 

appropriating, P. X. xii. 518. arcs, P. R. iv. 37. 

approve, P. X. iv. 880, viii. ardent, P. X. ix. 397. 

611, ix. 367, 1140, 1159. ardour, P. X. vi. 66, ix. 1032. 

approv'd, P. X. vi. 36, viii. ardours, P. X. v. 249. 

509, x. 31, xi. 458 ; S. A. Arethufe, Lye. 85; Arc. 31. 

421. argent, P. X. iii. 460. 

approves, S.A. 510. Argefles, £?. L. x. 699. 

April, Com. 67 1. Argo, P. L. ii. 1017. 

apt, P. L. viii. 188; Od. Pa J. Argob, P. L. i. 398. 

28. argue, P. X. iv. 931, x. 1014, 

more apt, P. R. ii. 454, xii. 283 ; P. P. ii. 94 ; Son. 

fo apt, P. P. iii. 248. xxii. 6. 

apter, P. L. iv. 672. argued, P. X. ii. 562, vi. 238 ; 

aquedu&s, P. R. iv. 36. £. ^. 1193. 

Aquilo, Od. D. F. I. 8. argues, P. X. ii. 234, iv. 830, 

Arabian, P. X. iii. 537 ; P. P. 949, viii. 21 ; S. A. 514. 

ii. 364, iii. 274; S.A. 1700. arguing, P. X. vi. 50S; P. J*. 

arable, P. X. xi. 430. iii. 4. 

Araby, the blefl, P. X. iv. 163. argument, P. X. i. 24, v. 809, 

Arachofia, P. P. iii. 316. vi. 84, ix. 13, 28, 42, x. 

Araxes, P. R. iii. 271. S00; P. R. i. 172 ; iii. 46, 

arbiter, P. X. ii. 909, ix. 50. 401 ; S. A. 283, 658, 903. 

arbitrary, P. X. ii. 334. arguments, 5. A. 862 ; Com.760. 

arbitrate, Com. 411. Argus, P. X. xi. 131. 

arbitrator, P. X. ii. 359. Ariel, P. X. vi. 371. 

arbitrement, P. X. viii. 641. Aries, P. X. x. 329, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



aright, P. L. vi. 470, x. 156, 
xi.578;P.i?. iv.348;S. A. 
154?. 

Arimalpian, P. L. ii. 945. 

Arioch, P. L. vi. 371. 

arife, P. L. i. 330, iv. 805, viii. 
200, xii. 531; P. P. ii. 47;' 
S. A. 467; Son. xvi. 11; 
Fac. £r. 91 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 42. 

arifes; P. L. v. 170. 

ark, P. L. i.458,xi. 819,823, 
840, 850, 855, 66 1, xii. 102, 
25 1 , 333, 340 ; Od. Nat. 220. 

arm, P. X. i. 113, ii. 318, iv. 
973, v. 64, vi. 239, 316, x. 
634; P. R. iii. 387. 

arm, (verb) P. L. ii. 173, 56S, 
222, vi. 466, 537, ix. 533, 
xii. 490 ; S.A. 639; Com. 
600,781. 

arm'd, P. L. i. 101, 305, 764, 
ii. 61, 447, 652, 757, 825, 
i v. 65, 779, vi. 1 10, 168, 364, 
400, 430, 655, 688, 697, 737, 
760,802, ix.390, x. 0,697, 
1023 ; S. A. 20, 347, 623, 
1134, 1280, 1494. 

armed, P. L. i. 567, ii. 130, vi. 
47, 127, 231; S. A. 1189, 
1617 ; Od. Nat. 58; Pf 
xxxiii. 31. 

armies, P. L. i. 272, ii. 334, 
594, vi. 44, 138, 204, vii. 
295, 296, x. 276; & A. 129, 
345. 

arming, P. L. i. 553, xi. 374. 

Armorick, P. L. i. 581. 

armour, P. 7,. vi. 209, 334, 389, 
656, vii. 409, xii. 491. 

armouries, -S'- A. 1281. 

armoury, P. L.w. 553, vi. 321, 
vii. 200. 

arms, (the) P. L. iv. 506, v. 
217, ix. 1103, x. 512, xi.240; 
8. AA63S, 16'36; Frtc. /s.r.94. 

arms, (weapons) P. />. i. 49, 94, 
119, 269, 325, 539, 564, 667, 
ii. 55, 63,124,164,395,513, 



537,691, 812, iv. 1008, v. 
722, vi. 17,32,50, 123, 136, 
209,247, 302, 361,418, 43S, 
449, 454, 525, 526, 595, 635, 
639, 662, 713, x. 541, xi. 
641, 643, 654, xii. 222, 431, 
644; P. R. i. 174, iii. 20, 
166, 305, 388, iv. 83, 112, 
235, 368, 405; S. A. 131, 
137,1038,1096,1119, 1226, 
VAl. 123; Com. 33, 440, 
612 ; Son. viii. 1, xv. 1, 
xvii. 3 ; Pf. iii. 3. 

army, P. L. iv. 953 t vi. 224, 
778, xii. 76; P.R. iv. 606; 
S. A. 346. 

Anion, P. L. i. 399- 

Aroer, P. L. i. 407. 

arofe, P. L. ii. 767, v. 452, vii. 
60, 449, 582, viii. 644. 

around, P. L. ii. 900; Od. Nat, 
54. 

arraign'd, P. L. iii. 331. 

array, (fub.) P. il. ii. 219, 386, 
iii. 17; S.A. 345; Fac. Ex. 
26. 

array, P. L. i. 548, ii. 887, vi. 
74, 106, 356, 801, x. 535, 
xi. 644, xii. 627. 

array'd, P. L. vi. 13 ; Od. Nat. 
111. 

arraying, P. L. iv. 596, x. 223. 

arreed, P. L. iv. 962. 

arrive, P. L. ii. 409, 979, iii. 
197 ; P. P. ii. 426. 

arriv'd, P. J,, iii. 520, iv. 720, 
792, v. 254, vi. 835, vii. 587. 
viii. 112, x. 22, 586. 

arrives, S. A. 1075. 

arrogate, P. L. xii. 27; P. R. 
iv. 315. 

arrow, P. L. ii. 811. 

arrows, P. L. vi. 546, 845 ; 
Com. 422. 

arrowy, P. P. iii. 324. 

Arfaces, P. P. iii. 295. 

arfenal, P. R. iv. 270. 

art, P, L. i. 696, 7$3 y ii. 272, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



410, iii. 602, iv. 236, 241, 
801, v. 297,770, vi.513, ix. 
391, x. 312; P.R. ii. 295; 
S.A. 1133, 1139; Com. 63, 
149, 309 ; Ep. W. Sh. 9. 

Artaxata, P. R. iii. 292. 

Artaxerxes, P. K. iv. 271. 

artful, P. P. iv. 335 ; Com. 494 ; 
Sow. XX. 11. 

articulate, P. L. ix. 557. 

artifice, P. L. ix. 39. 

artificer, P.L. iv. 121. 

artificers, P. P. iv. 59' 

artillery, P.L. ii. 715. 

artift, P. L. i. 288 ; S. A. 1324. 

arts, P.L. xi. 6lO; P.R. ii. 

158, iv. 83, 240, 338, 368 ; 
S. A. 748, 749, 1139. 

A. S. Fore, of Con. S. 

as at, P. L. 'ii. 23a. 

as from, P. L. iii. 346, 347, x. 

449, 688, xi. 316. 
as if, P. L. ii. 503, iii. 114, vi. 

195, x. 626; 0d.Nat.60. 
as one, P. L. xii. 1. 
as when, P. L. i. 33S, 594, 6l2, 

675, ii. 285, 488, 533, 542, 

636, 714, 943, iii. 431, iv. 

159, 183, 814, 837, 980, v. 
16, 26l, vi. 73, ix. 513, 634, 
670, x. 215, 273, 289, 431, 
xi. 760. 

Afcalon, P. L. i. 465 ; S. A. 

1187- 
Afcalonite, S. A. 138. 
afcend, P. L. ii. 56, 75, iv. 140, 

v. 80, 198,49S, 512, vi. 711, 

vii. 287, viii. 59^, xi. 143, 

366, 371,376, xii. 451 ; S. A. 

1508; P/:ixxxviii. 6. 
afcend ed, P. L. vi. 762, vii. 564, 

x. 18, 445. 
afcending, P. L, i. 722, ii. 489, 

930, iii. 502, 511, iv. 354, v. 

574; P. P. iv. 101. 
afcends, P. L. i. 499, iv-. 650. 
afcenfion, P.L.x. 187. 



afcent, P. L. ii. 81, iii. 486, 

524, iv. 172, 545, ix. 936, 

x. 224. 
afcribe, P.L. viii. 131. 
afcrib'ft, P. R. i. 453. 
Afdod, S.A. 981. 
ames, P.L. iii. 334, x. 566; 

S. A. 1691 ; Son. xviii. 10. 
Afhore, Com. 932. 
Afhtaroth, P. X. i. 422; P.R. 

iii. 417 ; Od. Nat. 200. 
afhur, Pf. lxxxiii, 29. 
amy, S. A. 1703. 
Afia, P. L. x. 310 ; P. Jl. iii. 33. 
Afian, P. JR. iv. 73. 
afide, P. L. iv. 502 ; Com. 168 ; 

Od. Nat. 12. 
afk, P. L. ii. 957, iv. 632, 832, 

908, vii. 69, 95, 121, viii. 

53, 66, 201, 614; P.R. i. 

326, iv. 552; S.A. 40, 66; 

Sow. xix. 8 ; xxii. 9 ; Ep' 

Hobf. 1. 17; Pf. ii. 16, lxxxi. 

43. 
afkance, P. L. iv. 504, vi. 149, 

x. 668. 
afk'd, P. L. ii. 685, iii. 217, iv. 

887, 899, vii. 11 1,635 ; P. R. 

i. 436 ; Lye. 91 ; Com. 575. 
afks, P. R. ii. 253. 
afleep-, P. L. iv. 791, v. 14. 
aflope, P. L. x. 1053. 
Afmadai, P. L. vi. 365. 
Afmodai, P.R. ii, 151. 
Afmodeus, P. L. iv. 168. 
afp, P. L. x. 524 ;. Son. xi. 13. 
afpeft, P.L. ii. 301, iii. 266, 

iv. 541, v. 733, vi. 81, 313, 

450, vii. 379, viii. 336, x. 

454; P.R. iii. 217- 
afpe&s, P. L. x. 658 ; Com. 694, 
afperfes, P. L. ix. 296. 
Afphaltick,£.L.i.411, x. 29S. 
afphaltus, P.L. i. 729- 
Afphodel, P. L. ix. 1040; 

Com. 838. -'-.- 
afpire, P. L. v. 484, xii. 64, 



vol. I, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



560 ; P. R. ii. 417; Com. 

12; Od. D. F.J. 63. 
afpir'd, P. X. iv. 62, ix. 167 ; 

P. ii. i. 215. 
cfpirer, P. X. vi. 90. 
afpircs, P. X. ii. 7* vi. 383, ix. 

169 ; P. P. ii. 469. 
afpiring, P. X. i. 38, iii. 392, 

iv. 526, vi. 132, 793, 899- 
Afpramont, P. X. i. 583. 
zk.S.A. 143, 1097; 
aflailant, 5. A. 1693. 
aflail'd, P. X. x. 417 ; Cow?. 689. 
aflail, S. A 756, 1165, 1396. 
aflaffin, P.L. xi. 219- 
afi'aflinated, S. A. 1109- 
afiault, P. X. ii. 343, iv. 190, 

vi. 51, 216, vii. 214, ix. 256, 

305 ; P. R. iii. 74, iv. 19 ; 

S.A. 331 ; Com. 649. 
aflaulted, -S. ^. 365. 
aflaulting, P. X. xi. 657- 
allaults, P. X. i. 277, ii. 953, 

x. 882, xii. 492 ; P. R. ii. 

195, iv. 570 ; S. A. 403, 

845. 
afiay, P.L. iii. 90; vi. 153, ix. 

747; P. P. i. 143,264, ii. 

234, iv. 478 ; Arc. 80. 
affay'd, P. X. i. 619, x. 567, 

865; 5.^.392, 1625. 
aflaying, P. X. iv. 801. 
aflays, P. X. iv. 932 ; Com. 972. 
affemble,. 'P. X. v. 683, xi. 

663. 
aflembled, P. X. iii. 330, v, 767, 

x. 34. 
affemblies, P.L. xi. 722; P/. 

vii. 25. 
aflcmbly, P.L. ii. 285, 749, vi. 

446 ; P. P. i. 34^'.^/. 1315; 

P/i. 14, lxxxiisil. 
aflembly's, Vac. Ex. 28. 
aflent, P. L. ii. 388. 
afietUing, P. X. v* 562. 
ttifert, P. X. i. -25, v. 801, vi. 

157; S.A. 407. 



aflcs, P. P. iii. 242; S.A. 1162', 

Son. xii. 4. 
afs's, S. A. 1095. 
affeffour, P. X. vi. 679. 
arduous, P. X. xi. 310. 
affign'd, P. X. v. 477, vi. 81/, 

ix. 231, x. 926; S.A. 1116, 

1217. 
affimilate, P. X. v. 412. 
aflift, P. X. ix. 247; P.P. ii. 

145. 
aflfifting, S. A. 1720. 
affociate, P. X. v. 696, ix. 227 ? 

x. 395. 
aflbciates, P. X. i. 265, viii. 

401. 
affume, P. X. i. 424, ii. 450, iii. 

303, 318, v. 794, vi. 3.53, 

730, x. 214; P.P. ii. 483. 
afiuming, P. X. xii. 65. 
aflure, P. X. v. 553. 
afiur'd, P. X. ii. 40, 685, iih 

263, v. 262, 553, viii. 449, ix. 

981, xi. 872; P.R. ii. 148; 

S.A. 739, 800, 1322. 
afiures, P. X. xi. 157. 
aflwage, S. A. 627 ; Pf. vii. 

22. 
Afiyria, P. X. i. 721 ; P. R. iii. 

270. 
Afiyrian, P. X. iv. 126, 285; 

P.P. iii. 436; Com. 1002. 
Aftaroth, 5.^. 1242. 
Aftartc, P.X. i. 439. 
afthmas, P. X. xi. 488. 
aftonied, P. X. ix. 890. 
aftonifh'd, P. X. i. 266, ii. 423, 

vi. 838; Pf. lxxxviii. 64. 
aftonifhment, P. X. i. 317; Com. 

157; £/>. W.Sh.7. 
Aftoreth, P. X. i. 438. 
aftound, Com. 210. 
abounded, P. X. i. 281. 
Aftracan, P. X. x. 432. 
Aftraea, P. X. iv. 998. 
z(lvfLy,Il Penf.69; Pf- i. U 
aftronumer, P. X. iii. £§9* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



afunder, P. X. ix. 258 ; Vac, 

Ex. 77;P/ vii. 5. 
at all, 5.^. 295,381. 
Atabalipa, P. X. xi. 409. 
atheift, P. X. i. 495. 
atheifts, S. A. 453, 
atheift- crew, P. X. vi. 370. 
atheifts, P. X. xi. 625. 
Athens, P. X. ix. 671; P. P. iv. 

240. 
Athenian, Son. via. 14 ; Od. D. 

F. I. 9. 
atheous, P.P. i. 487* 
athwart, P. X. ii. 683. 
Atlantean, P. X. ii, 306. 
Atlantick, P. X. iii. 559, x. 674; 

P.P. iv. 115; Com. 97. 
atlas, P. X. iv. 987, xi. 402. 
atom, P. X. viii. 18. 
atoms, P. X. ii. 900. 
atonement, P. X. iii. 234. 
Atropatia, P. P. iii. 319. 
Atropos, Ep. M. Win. 28. 
atrophy, PsX. xi. 486. 
attach'd, P. X. xi. 595. 
attack, P. X. vi. 248. 
attain, P. L. iii. 196, vii. 115, 

viii. 70, 412, ix. 726, 935 t 

964, xi. 376 ; P. P. i. 265, 

485, iii*. 211. 
attain'd, P. X- ix. 689, xii. 

575 ; P. P. ii. 437, 469, iii* 

89, iv. 106. 
attains, P. X. viii. 34, ix. 724, 

xii. 135. 
attempt, P. L. i. 44, 642, in 

420, 610, iv. 15, vii. 609, viii. 

237, ix. 295, 978, 1149, 

1180; x. 8; P. P. i. 113, ii. 

205, iv. 180, 625 ; S.A. 1267 ; 

Com. 406. 
Attempted, P. X. ii. 357, ix. 369 ; 

S. A. 1456. 
attempter, P. P iv. 603. 
attempting, P. L. ii. 377, 450. 
attempts, P. L. ix. 481 ; P. P. 

iii. 26; S.A. 1221. 
attend, P. P. ii. 386, iv. 387 ; 



S.A. 1731 ; ^rc. 81; Com. 

35. 
attendance, P. X. x. 80. Com, 

315. 
attendant, P. X. vii. 205, 547, 

viii. 149. 
attended, P. X. i. 76l, iii. 323, 

vi. 76J ; Com. 211. 
attending, P.P. i.53; Od.Nah 

242. 
attends, P. X. iii. 270, 658, iv, 

597, v. 520, vii. 407, viii. 

223, 247, ix. 638, x. 239, xi* 

551, xii. 12,354; Son.ix. 9. 
attent, P. R. i. 285. 
attention, P.L. i. 6l8, ii. 308, 

ix. 5^9, 566> x. 459, xi. 422 ; 

Com. 258. 
attentive, P. L. v. 545, vii. 51. 

more attentive, P. L. x. 101U 
atteft, P. X. ii. 495, ix. 369 ; 

Pv R. i. 37. 
attefted, P. R. i. 122. 
Attick, P. R. iv. 245 ; iZ Pew/. 

126; Son. xx. 10. 
attire, P. X. vii. 501 ; Son. xx« 

7 ; Od. on Time. 21 ; Fac. Ex. 

21. 
attrad, P. X. x. 152. 
attraded, P. L. v. 47- 
attra&ion, P. X. iv. 493,- x. 263. 
attractive, P. L. ii. 762, iv. 298, 

viii. 124, 587; P. P. ii. 17& 
attracls, P. P. ii. 475. 
attribute, P.L. viii. 107. 
attributed, P. X. viii. 12, ix. 

320; P.P. iii. 69. 
attributes, P. X. xi. 836. 
attributing, P. X k viii. 5t)5» 
attrite, P. X. x. 1073. 
attune, P. X. iv. 265. 
avail, P. X. i. 153, vi. 789, vii. 

85, xii. 515. 
availM, P. X. i. 748 ; S. A. 558. 
avails, P.L. vi. 456, xi. 312; 

P.P. ii. 66. 
avant, P. X. iv. 962. 
avarice, Son. xv. 14. 



b 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



audacious, P. L. i.400, ii.930. 
audible, P.L. xi. 266. 
audibly, P.L. vii. 518; P. P. 

2S4. 
audience, P. L. ii. 308, 555, v. 

804, vii. 31, 105, ix. 6'74, x. 

641, xii. 12. 
auditrefs, P. L. viii. 51. 
avenge, Son. xviii. 1. 
aveng'd, P. L. iv. 718, vi. 676, 

ix. 143, x. 374, xi. 458; P.P. 

iv. 606. 
avengers, P/! viii. 7. 
avenging, P. L. vi. 278, vii. 184. 
aver, S. A. 3'23. 
averfe, P. L. ii. 763, viii. 138, 

ix. 67; 5. ^. 1461; Pf, ii. 

22. 
averlion, P. P. ii. 457- 
avert, P.L. ix. 302, xii. 108; 

6'. A. 519- 
aught, P. L. i. 683, 748, ii. 447, 

657, 837, iii- 121, 592, iv. 

419, v. 207, 502, vi. 121, 545, 

vii. 640, viii. 30, 358, 583, 

596, 636, ix. 115, 34,7,573, 

969, x. 962, xi. 143, xii. 4 ; 

P. R. i. 333, 402, ii. 456, iii. 

98, 100, 101, 399, iv. 345, 

369, 382, 383, 592 ; S. A. 

274, 376, 743, 888, 1387, 

1420; Lye. V20;llPenf 11 6. 
augment, P. L. ii. 386, 605, vii. 

367, x. 964; P.P. iii. 38. 
augmented, P. L. vi. 280, ix. 

985. 
avoid, P.L. i. 505, ix. 294, 

364 ; S. A. 505 ; Com. 363. 
avo>ded, P. /,. x. 691 ; S. A. 

495. 
Avon, Vac. Ex. 97. 
avow, S. A. 1151. 
Auran, P. t. iv.211. 
Aurora, P. L. v. 6' ; HAL lp. 
A.ufonian, P. L. i. 739- 
a u lie re, P. L. ix. 272; S.A. 

815. 
aulterely, P. £. iv. 744. 



aufterity, Com. 450. 

authentick, P. L. iii.656, iv.719. 

author, P. L. ii. 781, 864, iii, 

374, iv. 635, v. 73, 188,397, 

vi. 262, vii. 591, viii. 317, 

360, ix. 771, x. 236, 356; 

S. A. 376. 

authority, P. L. iv. 295, viii. 

554, xii. 66, P.R. i. 289, ii. 
41§ ; S. A. 868. 
authors, P. L. iii. 122. 
autumn, P. L. iv. 557, v. 394. 
autumnal, P.L. i. 302; P. P, 

iv. 619. 
auxiliar, P. L. i. 579. 
aw -ft ruck, Com. 301. 
await, S. A. 1197 . 
awaited, P. R. ii. 108. 
awaiting, P.L. i. 566 y ii. 418, 

iv. 550, 864. 
awaits, P. X. xi. 193, 710 ; Son. 

xv. 9. 
awake, P. L. i. 330, 334, v. 17, 

20, 40, viii. 464 : Com. 275 ; 

Pf. lxxx. 11. 
awak'd, P.L. ii. 171, iv. 450, 

vi.59; P.R. ii. 272; S. A. 

330. 
awaken'd, P. P. i. 197. 
awak'ning, P. L. v. 672. 
awakes, Arc. 57. 
aware, P. L. iv. 119, vi. 547- 
away, P. P. iii. 366 ; Lye. 155 ; 

Or/. D. F. I. 12, 68 ; Ep. 

llobf. II. 15. 
awe, P. L. iv. 705, 860, v. 135, 

vi. 283, viii. 314, 558, ix. 

703; x. 712; P.R. i. 22; ii. 

220, iv. 6*25 ; Com. 32, 452 ; 

Oil. Nat. 32 J /)/«/. 14. 
aw'd, P. L. v. 358, xii. 198 ; 

S. A. 847 ; Pf. iv. 19. 
awful, P. /,. i. 753, ii. 478, iv. 

847, 960, viii. 577, ix. 537 ; 

Od. Nat. 57. 

more awful, P. L. ix. 537 ; 

P. P. i. 19. 
awhile, Svn. xi. 3. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



awry, P. L. iii. 488 ; P. R. iv. 

313; S.A. 1041. 
axe, 11 Pen/. 136. 
axes, P.R. iii. 331 ; Pf. lxxx. 

66. 
axle, P. X. ii. 926, vii. 381, 

viii. l65, x.670', Com. 96. 
axletree, Od. Nat. 84. 
Ay me, P.L. iv. 86', x. 813. S.A. 

330 ; Lye. 5ft, 154 ; Com. 511. 
aye, J/ P«(/! 48 ; Orf. Sol. Miff. 

7 ; P/l cxiv. 15, exxxvi. 3. 
Azazel, P. L. i. 534. 
Azores, P. X. iv. 592. 
Azotus, P. L. i. 46*4. 
azure, P. L. i. 297, vii. 479, 

ix. 429; Son. xiv. 11. 
azurn, Com. 893. 
Azza, S.A. 147. 



B. 

Baal, P.P. iii. 4 If. 
Baal-zebub, S. ^. 1231. 
Baalim, P. L. i. 422 ; Od. Nat. 

197. 
babble, Com. 807. 
babe, Orf. JVto. 151, 227, 238, 

Ep. M.Win. 31. 
Babel, P.L. i. 694, iii. 466; 

Pf. lxxxvii. 13. 
Babels, P. L. iii. 468. 
babes, iy. viii. 5. 
Babylon, P.L.i.717, xii. 343, 

348; P.R. iii. 280; iv. 336. 
Babylonian, Son. xviii. 14. 
Baca's, Pf. lxxxiv. 21. 
Bacchus, P.L.iv.279, vii. 33; 

LAI. \6 ; Com. 46, 522. 
back, P. L. i. 171, ii. 699 t 

759, 789, iii. 397, 6'24, iv. 

17, 480, 820, 914, 965, v. 

906, vii. 39, 194, 338, 534, 

562, 606, viii. 158, ix. 172, 

410, 784, x. 814, xi. 313, 

xii. 172,219,345; P.P. i. 

153, iii. 435, iv. 30, 396 ; 



S.A. 336, 1137; Com. 131, 

593, 958 ; Od. Nat. 135 ; 

Pf. lxxxv. 4. 
back'd, P. ii. iv. 29, 448. 
backs, P. L. vii. 286; S. A. 

140. 
backfide, P. L. iii. 494. 
backward, P. L.i. 223, vi. 863; 

Com. 81 7. 
Bactra, P. P. iii. 285. 
Badrian, P.L.x. 433. 
bad, P. L. i. 344, ii. 6, 483, 

849, iii. 331, i v. 795, v. 695, 

ix. 495, 994, 1073, 1091, x. 

41, 837, xi. 256, 358, 685, 

xii. 106, 336, 538 ; P. R. iii. 

114, iv. 1; S.A. 211, 1537; 

On Time, 9 5 Pf I 16. 
bade, Com. 639. 
baffled, S. A. 1237- 
bait, P. L. x. 551 ; P. JR. ii. 

204; 5.^. x.66. 
baited, Cow?. 162. 
baits, Com. 537, 700. 
Balaam, P. P. i. 49 1. 
balance, P. L. i. 349, iii. 482. 
balanc'd, P.L. iv. 1000. 
baleful, P. L. i. 56, ii. 576, 

Com. 255. 
ball, P. L. iv. 768, S.A. 9*. 
balls, P. L. vi. 18. 
balm, P.L. i. 774, ii. 402, iv. 

248, v,293,ix.629,xi.546; 

S.A. 186, 651 ; Com. 674. 
balmy, P.L. iv. 159, v. 23, viii, 

255, xi. 706; Com. 991. 
Baliara's, P. R. iii. 321. 
ban, P.L. ix.925. 
band, P. L. i. 356, 758, xi. 

646; P. P. ii. 236, S. A. 

1753; Com. 904. 
banded, P. L. ii. 320, v. 717, 

vi. 85, 528. 
bandite, Com. 426. 
bands, P. L. i. 675, ii. 570, 6\5, 

997, iii. 511, iv. 684, v. 287, 

651, xi. 20S ; Od.Nat. 228. 

iy. lxxxiii. 29. exxxvi. 50. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



bane, P. L. i. 692, ii. 808, iv. 

167, ix. 123, x. 412; S. A. 

63, 351. 
baneful, Com. 525. 
baniih, Com. 413. 
baniuYd, P. L. iv. 317, 573, 

xii. 619 ; Com. 692. 
banifhment, P. L. xi. 108. 
bank, P. L. iv. 262, 334, 458, 

vii. 403, viii. 286, ix. 438, 

1037, P. P- ii. 25; S.A.3; 

Com. 353, 543, 890 ; Fore. 

of Con. 17. 
banks, P.L. i. 468, ii. 574, vii. 

305 ; P. P. iv. 32 ; 5. A. 

1609; Arc. 97; Com. 933, 

936; Ep. M.Win. 59. 
banner'd, P. L. ii. 885. 
banners, P. L. i. 545, v. 687. 
banquet, P. L. x. 688. 
banquets, Com. 701. 
Baptitl, P.H. i. 25, 270, ii.2, 

iv. 511. 
baptifm, P.P. i. 21,273, 278, 

ii. 61. 
baptiz'd, P. L. i. 582, xii. 500; 

P.P. 1.21, 29, 184, iv. 512. 
baptizing, P. L. xii. 442; P. P. 

i. 328. 
bar, P. L. ii. 877, iv. 585, 897, 

x. 317; S. A. 147; Son, 

xxi. 4. 
barbarick, P. L. ii. 4. 
barbarous, P.L. i. 353, vii. 32, 

P.P. iii. 119, iv. 86; Com. 

550; Sow. xii. 3. 
barb'd, P. X. vi. 546. 
barber's, S. A. 1167. 
Barca, P.L. ii. 904. 
bard, P. L. vii. 34; Com. 45. 
bards, Lye 53; // Peftf ll6. 
bare, P.L. i. 379, 6*14, iii. 74, 

vii. 286, 313, 314, ix. 1062, 

xi. 834; S. A. 902; Com. 

6'] 4 ; Son. viii. 14. 
bark, P. L. ii. 288, x, 1076; 

Com. 354. 
bark'd, P. L. ii. 654, 658. 



barking, Com. 258. 
barn-door, L'Al. 51. 
barons, L"^/. 119. 
barr'd, P. L. ii. 437, iv. 967 f 

ix. 80, xii. 360 ; Com. 343 ; 

Pf. lxxxviii. 24. 
barren, P. L. iii. 437, v. 219, 

viii. 94; P. P. i. 354, iii. 

264 ; LAI. 73 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 22. 
barrennefs, P. L. x. 1042, S.A. 

352 ; Pp. M. Win. 64. 
barricado'd, P. L. viii. 241. 
bars, P.L. iii. 82, iv. 795, viii, 

625, x. 417. 
Bafan, P. L. i. 398. 
bafe, P. L. ix. 150, 498; P.P. 

iv. 132; 5.^.414,415; Com, 

698, 778 ; Oc". Nat. 130. 
bafer, P.L. ii. 141. 
bafes, P. L. ix. 36. 
bafeft, P.L. ix. 171. 
bafis,P.L.vi.712;P.P.iv.456. 
balks, L'Al. 112. 
baftards, Caw. 727. 
bate, Son. xxii. 7. 
bates, P. L. xii. 1 ; S.A. 1538. 
bathe, Cow. 812. 
bath"d,P.L. vii. 437. 
bathing, P.L. ii. 660. 
baths, P. P. iv. 36. 
battailous, P. L. vi, 81. 
battalion, P.L. i. 569, vi. 534. 
battening, Lye. 29. 

twice-batter'd, Od.Nat. 199. 
battery, P. L. xi. 656; P.P. 

iv. 20. 
battle, P. L. i. 43, 277, 319, 

553, ii. 107, 535, 550, 899, 

iv. 12, 927, v. 728, vi. 46, 

97, 108, 202, 235, 246, 386, 

798, 802, 819, x. 275, 377, 

xi. 644,691, 800; P.P. iii. 

320,322 ; S. A. 287, 583, 

1131; Com. 654; Pf. exxxvi. 

61. 

in battle, P. L. i. 104, 436, 
battlements, P. L. i. 742, ii. 

1049;P.P.iv.53;L'^/.77. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



battle's, Od. Nat. 53. 

battles, P. L. iv. 1002, vi.2l6, 
ix. 31, xii. 26l ; P. R. iii. 
73, 392, 

battering, P, L. ii. 923. 

bawl, Son, xii. 9. 

bay, P. £. ii. 289, vii. 399; 
P. P. ii, 347, iii. 273 ; Lye. 
191., 

Bayona's, JLyc, 162. 

bays, Ep. M. Win. 57. 

be, P.L. ii. 831, ix. 827, 936, 
xi. 200,703; P.P. i. 35,54, 
61, 62, 180, 204, 267, 342, 
343, 379, 383, 399, 405, 428, 
454, 458, ii. 36, 53, 88, 93, 

136, 144, 146, 407, 485, iii. 
13,18,54,55,57,81,88,89, 
100, 189, 202, 207, 209, 214, 
223, 229, 230, 232, 238, 240, 
368, iv. 13, 107, 108, 147, 
151, 196', 221, 346, 373, 612, 
6l6; S. A, 84, 91, 124,191, 
295, 296\ 300, 337, 355, 440, 
465, 502, 598, 604, 606, 645, 
(549,768,895,899,900,904, 
964, 1005, 1034, 1064, 1107, 

1116,1145,1156, i322,1399, 
1408, 1428, 1434, 1437,1483, 
1519, 1524, 1529, 1531,1562, 
1587, 1625 ; Lye. 184 ; L'Al. 
132; IlPenf, 86; Com. 12, 

137, 152, 159, 170, 176, 205, 
. 242,264,315,320,328,341, 

343, 348, 361, 364, 419, 431, 
463,482, 488, 489, 519, 500, 
589, 596, 6*13, 650, 668, 67 9 t 
728,737,739,755,772,775, 
786, 795, 813, 820, 821, 854, 
855,934,944,960,997,1010; 
Son. vii. 10, ix. 11, xii. 12, 
xiii. 7, xvii. 6, xx. 4 ; Od. 
Nat, 12, 216, 218; Od. D. 
P. J. 37 ; Vac. Ex. 55, 74>, 
80, 91; Ep. Hobf. II. 25; 
Forc.ofCon.il ; Pf. ii. 22, 23, 
iv. 22, 25, vii. 9, lxxxi. 3S. 
Ixxxiii. 1, 14, l6,lxxxiv. 33 } 



lxxxv. 55, lxxxvii. 7, 18, 

lxxxviii. 54, cxiv. 15. 
be it, P. L. x. 795. 
be it fo, P. L. x. 769. 
beach, P. L.i. 299, x. 299. 
beads, P.L. iii.491 ; Com. 391. 
beaked, P. L. xi. 746 ; Lye. 94. 
beaks, P. R. ii. 267. 
beam, P. L. ii. 399, 493, iii. 2, 

583, iv. 590, 1004, viii. 139; 

S.A. 83, 163, J 122; Com. 

98, 460. 
beaming, P. L. iii. 625, 
beams, P. L. i. 596. iii. 36l, 

378, 551, 616, iv. 37, 150, 

644, vi. 15, 82, vii. 363, viii. 

97, 255, ix. 106, x. 1070; 

P. R. iv. 432; Lye. 170 ; 

UPtnf. 132; iSrc. 16; Sew. 

xiv. 10; Od. Nat. 111. 
bear, P.L. ii. 209, 306, 411, 

iii. 652, iv.422, 473, v. 199, 

427, 592, 664, vi. 64, viii. 

375, 614, ix. 104, 213, x. 

726, 835, 916, 950, xi. 363, 

766, 776, 804; P. R. i. 13, 

135; S. A. 150,. 190, 239, 

755, 913, 1353; Com. 568; 

Son. xix, 11, xxii. 8; Od. 

Nat. 84, 220 ; Od. Paf. 39 ; 

Od. Cir. 6 ; 11 Pen/. 87. 
bear rule, P. L. x. 155. 
bearded, P. L. iv. 982, v. 342 ; 

Com. 72. 
bearers, £/?. Hobf. II. 20. 
bearing, P. L. xii. 311 ; £. ^„ 

655, 946. 
bears, P. I/, iii. 558, iv. 344, 

v. 368, viii. 166, xii. 241 ; 

P. P. ii. 465, iv. 517; S.A. 

57, 974, 1303. 
bear'it, P. L. x. 952 ; P. R. iv. 

199; 5.^.430, 1100. 
beaft, P. L. iv. 177, 600, 704, 
vii. 457, 495, 503, 522, viii. 
341,342,349,395,397,582, 
ix. 86, 165, 521, 560,691, 

769, x. 176, 604,. 710,' xi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



183,187,733,734,822,895, 

xii. 67; P.R. iv. 46 1 ; S.A. 

37, 127, 1402; Com. 528. 
bcafts, P. L. iv. 341, vii. 452, 

viii. 438, 594, ix. 94, 543, 

556, 571, 592, 768, 769, x. 

217, 221, xii. 30; P. It. i. 

310, 502, ii. 342, iv. 140; 

Pf. viii. 20, lxxx. 55. 
beat, P. L. ii. 588 ; Com. 143. 
beat oft', P. P. iv. 17- 
beat out, P. L. xi. 446. 
beaten, P. L. ii. 1026. 
beatifick, P.L. i. 684. 
beatitude, P. L. iii. 62. 
beauteous, P. L. iv. 697, vi. 

481, xi.6l3. 
beauties, P. Pi. ii. 197 ; 0d. 

D. F. I. 31. 
beauty, P. L. iv. 490, 498, 634, 

713, 845, v. 14,47, ix. 491, 

540, 1029, xi. 539; PR- »• 

1S6, 194,220; S.A. 1003; 

Lye. 149; HAl, 79', Com. 

393, 739, 748. 
beauty's, P. L. viii. 533, ix. 

607; P. R. ii. 212; J/Pctj/*. 

20. 
became, P. X. xi. l65, 420. 
becam'ft, P.L. ii. 765, vii. 528. 
breaufe, P. L. iii. 305, 311, v. 

539, vi. 814, vii. 168, ix. 280, 

x.ol, 175, 19S,xi.97; P.R. 

ii. 174, iv. 156; S. A. 1265, 

1402 ; Fore, of Con. 1 ; Pf. 

v. 22, viii. 6, lxxxvi. 63. 
beck, P. P. ii. 238. 
beckoning, Com. 207- 
becks, l/.V/. 28. 
become, P. />. ii. 275, 445, ix. 

716, 86*9, 1181, x. 120,722, 

xi. 84, xii. 2/5; S. A. 73, 

155. 
becomes, P. L. v. S43, ix. 122, 

xi. 61, xii. 409; P. /U. 288, 

iii. 303. 
bed, P.L. iv. 710, 761, vii. 290, 

viii. 598; S. A. 806, 1021 ; 



Lye. 168; UAL 115, 146; 

Com. 107, 885 ; Od. Nat. 229 ; 

Od. D.F.I. 13,31; Ep. M. 

Win. 42 ; Vac. Ex. 63 ; Ep. 

Hobf. II. 18; P/. vi. 13; 

lxxxviii. 43. 
bedeck'd, S. A. 712. 
bedew'd, Od. Hor. 1. 
bed-rid, S.A. 579- 
bedropt, P. L. x. 527. 
beds, P. L. ii. 600, iv. 242 ; 

L'AL 21; Cow. 998; P/ iv. 

21. 
bed-ward, P. L. iv. 352. 
bee, P. L. v. 24, vii. 490 ; II 

Penf. 142. 
Beelzebub, P. L. i. 81, 271, 

ii. 299, 378. 
been, P. L. vi. 218, ix. 806, 

923, 1148, xi. 342; P.R. i. 

432, ii. 80, iii. 232, iv. 10, 

537; 5.^.45,98,875,1077, 

1410 ; Lye. 57 ; II Penf. 59 ; 

Arc. 85 ; Ep. M. Win. 12 ; 

Tore, of Con. 10. 
Beerfaba, P. L. iii. 536. 
bees, P.L. i. 768; P.R. iv. 24S. 
bceft, P. L. i. 84. 
beeves, P. L. xi. 647. 
befall, P. L. iv. 127, vii. 44, 

ix.252, 1182,x.896,xi.771, 

xii. 444. 
befallen, P. L. ii. 821, ix. 771, 

x. 895, 928, xi. 450; S.A. 

374, 446. 
befel, P. L. vi. 897, vii. 43, viii. 

229, x. 28, xi. 7l6\ 
befits, P.L.x. 86*8. 
before, P.L. i. 18, 436, ii. 256, 

535, 648, 703, 803, 890, iii. 

8, 9, v. 585, vi. 107, 837, 

858, vii. 8, 66, 336, 374, 637, 

viii. 53, 67, 193, 306, 310, 

372, 464, 475, 496, ix. 53, 

139, 520, 523, x.75, 126, 

146, 160, 212, 586,947, 954, 

1088, 1100, xi. 13, 20, 25, 

39, 186,478,639, 813, xii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



34,202,361,502,608,633, 

646 ; P. JR. i. 249, 257, 272, 

302, 411, ii. 112, 178, iii. 

90, 245, iv. 112, 507, 632; 

S. A. 455, 465, 517, 876, 

1 147,1448, 1474, 1475,1552, 

l6l6, 1618, 1624>-,L'AI. 52; 

Com. 1,75; Son. xiv. 3 ; Od. 

Nat. 118 ; Od. PaJ)\ 47 ; Od. 

D. F. I. 50 ; Ep. M. 7Vin.66 ; 

Vac. Ex. 6, 32 ; Pf v. 24, 

lxxxiv. 27. 

as before, P.P. ii. 299- 
before-hand, P. R. iv. 8, 526. 
befriend, Com. 135 ; Vac. Ex. 

59- 

beg, P. L. x. 918, 1089, xi. 
506 ; P. It. iv. 630 ; 5. A 
707; Com. 623. 

began, P. L. i. 83, ii. 118, 680, 
iii. 355, iv. 31, 537, 979, v. 
144, 152, 396, 562, vi. 56 , 
97,261,406,417,679,748, 
vii. 63, 86, 246, 636, viii. 
250, ix. 192, 204, 531, 675, 
678, 794, 1014, 1 123, x. 234, 
590, 706, xi. 21, 729, xii. 
636; P.P. i. 499, ". 10, 120, 
iii. 266 ; Com. 545 ; Pf. lxxx. 

39. 
beget, P. L. viii. 423, ix. 95, 

x. 728, 762, xi. 613 ; Com. 

669. 
beggery, S. A. 69. 
begg'd, P.L.x. 1101. 
begging, P.L. iv. 104. 
begin, P. L. iv. 832, vi. 278, 

viii. 162, ix. 669, 1142, x. 

213, xi. 633, xii. 6; P.R. 

i. 132, 186, 288, ii. 113, iii. 

185, 198, iv. 635, 640; S. A. 

274, 1381; Lye. 15, 17; 

Com. 1 25, 206. 
beginning, P. L. i. 9, iii. 663, 

vii. 638, viii. 251, ix. 26; 

P.P. i.408, iv.99, 392. 
begins, P. L. ii. 1037, iv. 15, 

v. 559^ x. 1064, xi. 174, 634 ; 



P. R. in. 179; L'Al. 60; Ii 
Pen/. 131 ; Od. Nat. 167. 

begird, P. L. v. 868. 

begirt, P.L. i. 581; P.H.ii. 
213. 

begot, P. L. ii. 794, v. 603, x. 
765, xii. 286; P. JR. ii. 181; 
Pf. viii. 13. 

begotten, P. L. ii. 782, iii. 384, 
x.983; Pf ii. 15. See Son. 

beguil'd, P. L. i. 445, iii. 689, 
ix. 905, x. 162, 880; P. R. 
ii. 169; S.A. 759; Od.PaJl 
54. 

begun, P. I. vii. 93, viii. 311, 
ix. 224, x. 811. 

behalf, P. X. iii. 218, xi. 102. 

beheld, P. L. i. 309, 607, iii. 
64, 554, iv. 117,723, v. 13, 
87, 219, vi.607, 681, 825, 
vii. 137, 255, viii. 284, ix. 
541, 608, 1082, x.454, 863, 
xi. 429, xii. 641 ; P. R. i. 
295, ii. 31, 338; 5.^. 1543, 
1642. 

beheld'fr, P. L. xi. 700, 819. 

Behemoth, P. L. vii. 471. 

beheft, P.L. v. 311,xi. 99, 251. 

behefts, P. L. iii. 533, vi. 185, 
viii. 238. 

behind, P. L. i. 286, 446, 596, 
ii. 120, iii. 626, v. 119, vi. 
578, 864, ix. 277, x. 266, 
588, xii. 205 ; P. R. ii. 46, 
iii. 78, 323, 423, iv. 193 ; 
S.A. 360, 721, 858, 1300, 
1375, 1618 ; Son. xiv. 6. 

behold, P. L. i. 605, 777, ii. 
959, 1046, iii. 236, 387, 672, 
iv. 358, 679, 821, v. 45, l6l, 
308, 605, 719, 866, vi. 550 f 
637, 810, vii. 86, 222, 539, 
549, 554, viii. 15, 342, 349, 
481, 529, 605, ix. 455, 480, 
576, 735, 1080, x. 81, 326, 
724, xi. 110, 332, 423, 464, 
495,581,711,754,839, xii. 
142; P.jR. i. 130,269,386, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ii. 44, 331, iii. 293, iv. 26, 

57,237,435;$. J. 206,339, 

708, 740, 1473, 1543, l6'0S, 

1644 ; // Pen/. 67, Arc. 40 ; 

Com. 672, 968 ; Pf. vii. 50, 

viiii 9, lxxx. 59. 
beholders, P. L. ix. 544. 
beholding, P. L. ii. 77, v. 329, 

xii. 50. 
beholds, P. L. i. 323, iii. 78, 

vi. 472, xi. 864. 
behold'ft,P.P. iii. 269, iv. 162. 
behoof, P. L. ii. 982 ; Od. D. 

F. I. 45. 
behoves, P. L. ii. 942, iv. 93 1. 
being, P.L. i. 154, ii. 98, 147, 

440, 585, 865, iii. 374, iv. 

483, v. 455, 487, 825, 858, 

viii. 174,294, ix.266, x.747, 

988, xi.769, xii. 85; P. R. 

i. 62, ii. 114; Com. 8, 3/0, 

469 ; Vac. Ex. 80 ; Ep. Hob/. 

1.3. 
belated, P. L. i. 783. 
belch'd, P. L. vi. 586. 
belching, P. L. x. 232. 
beldam, Vac. Ex. 46. 
Belial, P. L. i. 490, 502, ii. 109, 

226, vi.620; P. itii. 150, 

173. 
belief, P. L. viii. 136, ix. 719, 

xi. 146; S. A. 117, 1535. 
believe, P. L. i. 144, 631, viii. 

294, ix. 684, xi. 355, xii. 

116, 407, 441 ; S.A. 599> 

830; Cow. 2 17, 438; Vac. Ex. 

12. 
believ'd, P. R. i. 274, ii. 5. 
believers, P. L. xii, 520. 
believes, P. L. xii. 127. 
believ'ft, P.L. vi. 471. 
believing, P. L. x. 42. 
belike, P. L. ii. 156. 
Bellerophon, P. />. vji. 18. 
Bellerus, Lye. l6'0. 
bellies, LttC, 1 14. 
lklloiut, P. /,. ii. 92. 
bellow, P. L. i. 177. 



bellowing, P. L. vi. 36?, 
bells, tyc. 135 ; L'Al. 93. 
belly, P.L. x. 177, 514. 
belman's, // Pen/. 83. 
belong, P. L. v. 167, xi. 1.63. 
belongs, P. L. vi. 807, x. 84, 

496, xi. 166; P.P. iii. 141; 

Lye. 121 ; Com. 85. 
belov'd, P. L. vi. 680, x. 70, 

489, xii. 308 ; P. P. i. 32, 

85, 285, 379, iv. 513. 
below, P. L. iii. 600, xi. 068; 

11 Pen/. 162 ; Com. 734 ; Od. 

Nat. 90; 0J. D. P. J. 49, 

64. 
Belus, P. L. i. 720. 
bench, Sow, xxi. 1. 
bend, P. L. i. 6l6, ii. 354, 477, 

573, 729, v. 787, 817, xi. 

30, Arc. 6; Com. 1015 ; 

Brut. 10 ; P/ lxxxi. 40, 62, 

lxxxviii. 8. 
bended, P. L. vi. 194, vii. 410, 

ix. 1105 ; P/ vii. 46. 
bending, P. X. iv. 462, xi. 152 ; 

Od. Nat. 71. 
bends, P. L. iii. 573, iv. 9S1 ; 

Com. 899 ; P/ viii. 8. 
beneath, P. L. i. 115,355, ii. 

1003, iii.30, 332, 526, 739, 

iv. 83, 205, 303, 592, vi. 342, 

510, viii. 318, 382,411, ix. 

1129, x. 687; P. P. ii. 124, 

293, iv. 203, 556 ; S. A. 

1469, 1652 ; Lye. 16, 167 ; 

Od. Nat. 102. 
benediction, P. L. viii. 645, xii. 

125 ; P. R. iii. 127- 
benefactors, P. R. iii. 82. 
beneficence, P. R. iii. 133. 
benefit, P. L. viii. 90, xii. 426. 
benefits, P. P. iii. 137. 
benevolent, P.L. viii. 65. 
Bengala, P. P. ii. 638. 
benighted, Com. 150, 3S4. 
benign, P. P. viii. 492, xi.334, 

xii. 538. 
beniibn, Com. 332. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



bent, i. 681, ii. 923, iii. 84,441, 
iv. 188, 568, 79*, v. 829, vi. 

112,506, 826, ix. 55, 384, 
x. 454, 885, xi. 190, 548, 

577, 597, xii. 2; P. JR. ii. 
-291, iv. 424, 465; S.J. 

I486 ; Son. xix. 4 ; Vac. Ex. 

55. 
bent down, P. L. iii. 58, iv. 460. 
benumm, P. L. ii. 74. 
benumming, S. J. 630. 
bereave, P. L. x. 918, 
bereav'd, P. L. vi. 903, ix. 46l ; 

S.J. 85, 1294. 
bereaving, P. L. x. 810; Pp. 

JF. Sk. 13. 
bereft, P. L. xi. 628 ; S. J. 48 ; 

Com. 277', Son. xxii. 3. 
berries, Zyc. 3 ; Com. 168. 
berry, P. L.x. 307, 346. 
beryl, P. L. vi. 756; Com. 933. 
befeech, P. L. xii. 236; S.J. 

751. 
befeeching, P. L. v. 869, x. 

1082. 
befeeming, Com. 769. 
befeems, P. L. ii. 869, iv. 338 ; 

P. it. ii. 335. 
befet, P. X. ii. 10l6, x. 124, 

xi. 702. 
befide, P. L. v. 54, vi. 763 

P. JR. iv. 202; J/ Pew/. 116; 

Com. 287,950 ; Otf. Nat. 224 ; 

Od. tfr. 23. 
befides, P. X. i. 32, 194, 298, 

ii. 20, 221, 504, iii. 598, vi. 

626, vii. 125, viii. 25, x. 737, 

xi. 300, 527; P.P. H. 408, 

iii. 419, iv. 53, 150; S.J. 

441, 845, 1361; Lye. 128; 

Com. 18; Son. xvii. 9; Ep. 

M. Win. 4, 53. 
befiege, Od. D. F. I. 4,7- 
befieging, P. L. v. 869. 
befmearM, P. I. i. 392, v. 356. 
befotted, Com. 778. 
befought, P. i. ii. l66> v. 848, 

vii. 109, ix. 11&5, x. 912, 



xii. 238; P. P. iii. 421; Pf, 
lxxxi. 43. 
befpake, P. L. ii. 849, iv. 1005; 
P.P. i. 43; Lye. 112; Od. 
Nat. 76. 
bell, P. L. i. 247, 691, 765, ii. 
40, 230, 280, 357, 458, iv. 
203, 309, 398, 738, 776, 852, 
v. 19,95,160,333,574,779, 
vi. 353, 724, vii. 115, viii. 
106, 169, 428, 550, 611, ix. 
201, 230, 249, 258, 317, 343, 
402, 433, 541, 745, 808, 896, 
995, 1092, x. 82, 173, 599t 
651, 867, xi. 54, 365, 438, 
497, 603, xii. 56*1 ; P. P. i. 
105, 186, 288, ii. 113, 382, 
iii. 8, 174, 177, 182, 194, 
198, 224, 238, 250, iv. 235, 
262, 266, 364, 381, 476, 524, 
553 ; S. J. 225, 314, 510, 
759, 908, 1029, 1034, 1060, 
1167,1264,1429,1521,1718, 
1745, 1748; Com. 28, 171, 
377, 487, 573, 90S; Son. 
xiii. 8, xiv. 9, xvii. 7, xix. 
10, 11. 
at belt, Pf. lxxxi v. 36. 

beftead, II Ptvf. 3. 

beftial, P. L. i. 435, ii. 873, iv, 
754, ix. 165. 

beftir, P. Li. 334. 

beftirs, P. L. v. 337- 

beftow, P. L. v. 317, viii. 483; 
Pf. ii. 17, lxxxv. 49. 

beftow'd, P. L. iii. 673, v. 318, 
386, viii. 537; P.P. ii. 395. 

beftrown, P. L. i. 311, iv. 631. 

beftruck, P. L. xii. 536. 

beftud, Com. 734. 

beft-refolv'd, S. J. 847. 

betake, P. L. x. 922 ; Com. 351. 

betakes, Com. 6l. 

Bethabara, P. R. i. 184, ii. 20, 
iii. 431. 

Bethel, P.L. i. 485. 

bethink, P. L. ii. 73 ; Com* 
820. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Bethlehem, P. R. I 243, ii. 78, 

iv. 505 ; Od. Nat. 223. 
bethought, P. P. iii. 149- 
betide, P. L. xii. 480. 
betides, P.il. iv. 451. 
betimes, P. L. iii. 186; Son. 

xxi. 9. 
betokening, P.L.xi.867; P.R- 

iv. 490. 
betook, P. L. vi. 663, ix. 388, 

x. 610 ; P. JR. iv. 403. 
betray, S. A. 383, 399, 750, 

945. 
betray'd, P. L. iv. Il6; 5.^. 

33, 379, 840, 1109; Corn. 

697- 
better, P. X. i. 263, 645, 688, 

ii. 114, 196, iii. 680, iv. 167, 

385, 915, 938, v. 167, 785. 

vi. 30, 440, vii. 189, viii. 33, 

ix. 31, 102, 365, 998, x, 593, 

1011, 1068, 1086, xi. 42, 

502,635,763,xii.302; P.P. 

ii. 332, 486, iii. 180, 397, iv. 

445; S.A. 182, 579, 584; 

Lye. 67 ; Arc. 101 ; Com. 

123, 775 ; Son. xvii. 2; Hor. 

III. 2. 

much better, P. L. xi. 599. 

no better, P. P. i. 248 ; iv. 

8; S. A. 797, 1163; Son. 

xxii. 14. 
between, P. L. i. 387, ii. 726, 

iii. 70, iv. 699, v. 268, 306, 

702, vi. 162, 441, 756, vii. 

201,241,439,473, ix. 237, 

1107, 1151, x. 179, 180,362, 

497, 924, xi. 639, xii. 197, 

207, 253; P. R. iii. 36*1; 

S. A. 1630 ; Pf. lxxx. 6. 
betwixt, P. L. ii. 593, 1018, 

iii. 462, iv. 252, 549, 998, 

x.328, xii. 3; UAL 82. 
bevy, P. L. xi. 582. 
bewail, S. A. 151, 182, 955. 
bewail'd, Od. D. F. I. 7. 
bewailing, P. L. xi. Ill; S. A. 

1742. 



beware, P. L. iv. 559, v. 237, 

vi. 894, vii. 42, 545, viii. 638. 
beyond, P. L. i.409, 542, 587, 

781, ii. 7, 8, 318, 587, iii. 

138, 560, 591, iv. 160, v. 

159, vi. 140, 629, vii. 120, 

viii. 581, 631, ix. 78, 96,227, 

424, 627, 1173, x. 245, 292, 

434, 463, 681, 805, 840, xi. 

828, xii. 555, 560; P.P. ii. 

202, iii. 273, 384; 5.^.117; 

Lye. 156; Com. 813 ; Brut. 8. 
bickering, P. L. vi. 766. 
bid, P. L. i. 246, ii. 514 vi. 

176, 202, vii. 107, 166,304, 

viii. 185, 519, ix. 353, x. 

668,672, xi. 590 ; P.P. ii. 

274, 326 ; S. A. 1310, 1392; 

Lye. 22, 149 ; VAL 46 ; // 

Paif 105; Arc. 13; Com. 

400; Son. viii. 10, xiv. 13; 

Od. Nat. 76, 124. 
bidden, Lye. 118. 
bidding, P. X. iii. 712, xi. 112, 

314; Son. xix. 12. 
bide, P. X. iii. 321, x. 738 ; 

P. P. i. 59, ii. 304 ; Pf. 

lxxxiv. 19, lxxxvi. 38. 
biding, Od. D. F. I. 21 ; Pf. r. 

11. 
bids, P. L. ii. 733, iv. 633, 748, 

x. 1067 ; P. P. i. 377, 495 ; 

Com. 93. 
bidft, P. X. iv. 635 ; Brut. 4. 
big, P/i vii. 471. 
biggeft, P. L. vii. 471. 
bignefs, P. L. i. 778, ii. 1052. 
bill, P.L. xi. 859; &>«• i- 6. 
billows, P. L. i. 224 ; Com. 932. 
bind, P. L. iii. 36l, 602, v. 8 19, 

ix. 210, 76O, 761, xi. 881, 

xii. 525; S. A. 209; LAI. 

87 ; Soil. xvi. 12 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 

20. 
bind'ft, Orf. Hor. 3. 
bird, P. L. iii. 38, iv. 600, 648, 

655, 704, v. 40,272, vii. 394, 

viii. 342,349,351, 395 f xi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



J83,185,734;P.it.iv.245; 
II Pen/. 61 ; Son. i. 9- 

bird of night, P. X. viii. 518 ; 
S. A. 1707. 

birds, P. X. ii. 4^4, it. 264, 
642,651, v. 8,197, vi. 74, 
vii. 433, viii. 265, 515, 528, 
xi. 186; P. P. ii. 290, iv, 
434, 503 ; Od. Nat. 68. 

birth, P. X. iii. 285, iv. 15, v. 
180, 862, vii. 102, 454, ix. 
Ill, 624, x. 207, xi. 768, 
xii.360,364;P.P.i. 66, 140, 
238,270; ii. 71,413; S.A. 

23, 171, 525, 1135, 1431; 
L'Jl. 14 ; Od. PaJ. 3 ; Ep. 
M.Win. 5, 15,31,67; Vac. 
Ex.59; Pf viii. 4. 

birth-day, P. L. vii. 256. 
birthright, P. L. i. 51. 

309 ; P. it. iv. 506. 
births, P. X. xi. 687. 
Biferta, P. X. i. 385. 
bitter, P. X. ii. 598, 808, iv. 

24, viii. 328, ix. 172, x. 566; 
S. A. viii. 23; Lye. 6; CM. 
Nat. 152. 

bitterly, 5'. .4. 431. 
bitternefs, P. X. xi. 157- 
bituminous, P. X. x. 562, xii. 

41. 
Bizance, P. X. xi. 395. 
blab, S.A. 495. 
blabbing, Com. 138. 
black, P. X. i. 405, ii. 67, 

578, 670, 714, iii. 475, vii. 

238, 547, ix. 180, x. 702, 

847, xi. 738, xii. 41; S.A. 

600, 602, 973, 1133; Com. 

62, 337; II Pen/. 16, 17; 

Od. Pafs. 34 ; Od. D. F. I. 

67 ; Od. Hor. 1. 
blackeft, P. L. ii, 136, vi. 515; 

HAL 2 ; Od. Nat. 207. 
Blackmoor, P. R. iv. 72. 
blade, Com. 651. 
blains, P. L. xii. 180. 
blame, P. X, iii. 697, iv. 758, 



v. 119, viii. 66, ix. 292, 
1143, x. 130, 833.958; S. 
A. 848, 1723; Com. 409; 
Od. Nat. 41 ; £/>. M. Win. 
27 ; P/. v. 34. 
blam'd, P. X. x. 959- 
blam'it, P. X. viii. 612. 
blanc, P. X. x. 656. 
bland, P. X. v. 5, ix. 855, 1047- 
blandifli'd, S. A. 403. 
blandifhments, P. X. viii. 351. 
blank, P. X. iii. 48, ix. 890; 
P. it. ii. 120; S. A. 471; 
Cow. 452 ; Pf. vi. 21. 
blafphem'd, P. X. iii. 166, xii. 

411; £.^.442. 
blafphemies, Com. 77 9 '• 
blafphemous, P. X. v. 809, vL 

360. 
blaft, P. X. i. 708, x. 693, 701, 
x\.76;S.A. 972; Lye. 97i 
Com. 640. 
blaft, Od. Nat. l6l. 
blafted, P. X. i. 615, vi. 372, 
x. 412; P. it. iv. 181; Od. 
D.F.I. I. 
blading, P. X. iv. 928 ; Arc. 4£. 
blafts, P. P. iv. 18, 31 ; Com* 

845. 
blaze, P. X. i. 665, iii. 378, iv, 
818, vi. 18, ix. 1083, x. 453; 
P. R. iii. 47 ; Lye. 1±; Od. 
Nat. 9; Arc. 2, 74; Pf 
lxxxiii. 56. 
blaze abroad, Pf. Ixxxvi. 

exxxvi. 5, 43. 
blaz'd, P. L. i. 194, vi. 306, 

77 S, xii. 633 ; S. A. 528. 
blaz'd forth, P. X. x. 65^ 
blazing, P. X. i. 728, iv. 29, v. 
757 9 vii. 575, ix. 639 f xi. 
229 ; Ep. M. Win. 70. 
blear, Com. 155. 
bleating, P. X. i. 489, "• 494, 

vii. 472, xi. 649. 
bleak, P. R. ii. 74; Com. 26$; 

0</. X). P. I. 4. 
bled, P/. lxxxiii. 43. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



bleed, P. I. vi. 333 ; Son. xv. 

13; Pf. \xxxi\i. 44. 
bleeds, Od. Cir. 11. 
blemilh, Son. xxii. 2. 
blefs, P. L. x. S21; II Pot f 84; 

^rc.60; Od. AW. 126; Od. 

D. F. I. 65; Pf. v. 38, 

cxxxvi. 56. 
Wetted, P. L. iii. 136, v. 6l3, 

vi. 267, vii. 395, 530, 592, 

x. 723, xi. 317, xii. 14S, 

450. 
blefsM, Pf.i. 1. 
bleffednefs, P. L. vii. 59- 
blefling, S. A. 357; P/* iii. 24. 
bleflings, Com. 772; Vac. Ex. 

64. 
blefs us, Son. xi. 5. 
bleft, P.L. ii. 847, iii. 347, iv. 

774, v. 387, viii. 640, ix. 

796, xi. 67, 598, xii. 126, 

151,277,553; P. R. ii. 56, 

68, 93; Lye. 177; CW?. 26s, 

329 ; Od. Nat. 237 ; Od. D. 

F.I.36; Od. Sol. Muf. 1; 

Pf. lxxxiv.34, 46. 
ever-bleft, P. L. iii. 149, vi. 

184, xii. 573. 
blew, P. L. xi. 73. 
blind, P.L. iii. 35, 200,452; 

P. P.iv.259; 5.^.68,366, 

438, 563, 941, 1106, 1328, 

1474, 1687 ; Lye. 119; Com. 

181, 519; Son. xxii. 14; 

Od. Nut. 223; Pf. lxxxi. 

52. 
blinded, P. L. iii. 200. 
bhndnefs, 5. A. 196,418,1221, 

1686. 
blifb, P. L. i. 607, ii. 86, 375, 

832, 867, iii. 305, 358,408, 

525, iv. 359, 728, 884, v. 

241, 297, 517, 543, 597, vi. 
■ 52, 273, 729, 892, vii. 55. 

viii. 299, 522, ix. 263, 411, 

631, 879, 916, 1160, x. 25, 

39Q, 503, xi. 43, 708, xii. 

462,551; P.R.I 361,419, 



iv. 597,612; Com. 263, 741> 

813; Son. ix. 13, xiv. 8 

Od. Nat 165 ; On Time, 11, 
blifs on blifs, P.L. iv. 508. 
blifsful, P. L. i. 5, iii. 69 t 527, 

iv. 208, 690, v. 292, x. 225, 

xi. 77; Com. x. 10; Od. 

Nat. 98 ; Vac. Ex. 35. 
blithe, P. L. ix. 625, 886, xi. 

615; P.R. iv. 585; L'Al 

24, 65. 
blood, P. L. i. 392, 451, iv, 

S05, x. 527, xi. 447, 543, 

791, xii. 176, 292, 293; 

P. R. ii. 178; iv. 139; S, 

A. 1513, 1726; Com. 610, 

810; Son. xii. 14, xvi. 7, 

xviii. 10 ; Od. Paf. 40 ; Pf. 

lxxxiii. 23. 
bloody, P. L. x. 278, xi. 457, 

6*51; Son. xviii. j; Pf v. 

l6, lxxxviii. 19, cxxxvi. 6l. 
bloom, P. L. iii. 43, v. 25, viii.- 

45; S. A. 1576; Com. 2 89, 
bloom, P. L. iii. 355. 
blooming, P. L. iv. 219; Com, 

394. 
bloomy, Son. i. 1. 
blofibm, .Scm. vii. 4; £^. jlf. 

Win. 41 ; Pf Ixxxv. 46. 
bloffoms, P. L. iv. 148, 630, 

vii. 326; Com. 396. 
blot, S. A. 411, 978; Com. 

133; Od. D. P. /. 12. 
blot out, P. L. xi. 891, xii. 

188. 
blotted out, P. L. i. 362. 
blow, P. L. ii. 171, 717, iv. 

l6l, v. 192, vi. 60, 140, 370; 

x. 166; P. R. i. 317; Com. 

993 ; // Penf. 161 ; Od. SoL 

Muf. 11; If. lxxxi. 9. 
blowing, P. L. i. 540, ix. 629, 

x. 289, xi- 842 ; S. A. 10. 
blown, P. L. vii. 319, ix. 579; 

xi. 16; S.A. 1070 ; Od. D. 

F. I. 1. 
blowa up, P, L. iv. 809, xi. 313. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



blows, P. X. iii. 4S8, v. 22; 

Lye. 48, 94. 
blue, P. X. xi. 206; Lye. 192 ; 

VAl. 21 ; ^/c 51 ; Com. 

434; Or/. Nat. 210. 
blue-hair'd, Com. 29. 
blufh, P.X. xi. 184. 
blufhing, P. X. viii. 511. 
blufter, P. X. x. 665. 
bluftering, P. X. ii. 286, iii. 

426. 
board, P. X. v. 343. 
boar, Pf. lxxx. 53. 
.boars, <S. ^. 1138. 
fcoaft, P. X. i. 693, ii. 52, 483, 

iv. 14, 87, 1008, vi, l63, ix. 

960, xi. 86; P. P. ii. 119, 

iv. 307; S. A. 1104, 1127; 

Com. 75 t 273, 662; Od. May 

M.S. 
boafted, P. L. i. 510; 5. A. 

470. 
.boailer, 5. vtf. 1227. 
boaft'ft, P. P. i. 409. 
feoaftful, P. X. vi. 84. 
boafting, P. X. iv. 85. 
boafts, P. P. i. 144, iv. 306. 
Bocchus, P. R. iv. 72. 
bodies, P. L. v. 497, vi. 574, 

vii. 354, viii. 28, 87, x. 

1072. 
body, P.X. iii. 619, iv. 6l8, 

953, v. 478, viii. 622, ix. 
. 779, x. 587, 791, xi.687; 

P.R. ii. 478; S. A. 18, 52, 

1706, 1725 ; Com. 473. 
body's, P. P. ii. 255 ; S. A. 

159, 607. 
boding, P. P. iv. 490. 
bog, P. X. ii. 592, 948. 
boggy, P. X. ii. 939- 
bogs, P. X, ii. 621, ix. 641, 
boil, P. R. ii. 343. 
boiling, P. L. i. 706, ii. 183, 

1027. 
boils, P. X. iv. 16, xii. 45. 
boifterous, 5. A. Ii64, 1273; 

(W.-D. P. /. 9. 



bold, P. X. i. 82, 127, 470, 

763; ii. 204, 386,^571,751, 

iv. 13, 854, 882, v. 66, 803, 

876, viii. 235, ix. 304, 436, 

921, x. l6l, 521, xi. 642; 

P. R. ii. 312, iv. 625; S. A. 

138, 1152; L'Al. 119; // 

Pen/. 110; Com. 397, 6ll; 

Son. xvii. 4; Brut. 14; P/: 

lxxxii. 8, lxxxiii. 33, exxxvi. 

65. 

more bold, P. X. ix. 664. 
bolder, P. X. iii. 13, ix. 523, 

xi. 92 ; P. P. iv. 180. 
boldeft, P.X. vi. 118. 
boldly, P. X. ii. 968, iv. 891 5 

Com. 649. 
boldnefs, P. X. iv. 908. 
bolder, Com. 353. 
bolt, P. X. ii. 877, vi. 491 ; 

Com. 445, 760. 
bolted, P.X. iv. 190 ; S. A. 

1696. 
bond, P. X. ix. 956. 
bondage, P. X. i. 658, ii. 321; 

S.A. 152,270. 
bond-ftave, S. A. 38, 411. 
bond-woman, P. P. ii. 308. 
bonds, P. X. ii. 207, vii. 465; 

S. A. 42, 853 ; Pf. ii. 7. 
bone, P. X. iv. 483, viii. 495, 

ix. 915, xi. 641; S. A. 143, 
bones, P. X. i.427; S. A. 1142; 

X3/C. 155 ; Son. xviii. 1 ; Ep* 

W.Sh.i;Pf.v\.5. 
bonnet, Lye. 112. 
book, P. X. iii. 47; viii. 67; 

Com. 367 ; Son. xi. 1, xviii* 

5 ; Pp. JF. «SA. ii. 
books, P. X. i. 363 ; P, P. iv. 

321, 327 :S.^.653 5 Com.391. 
boon, P. X. iv. 242, ix. 793. 
boots, S. A. 560 ; Ep. Hob. i. 

16 ; Lye. 64. 
booty, P.X. xi. 650. 
border, P. X. ii. 36l, iv. 131. 
bordering, P.X. i.419, "• 131, 

959;P.P.i. 193 J S. A-97& 



VERBAL INDEX. 



borders, P. L. iii. 537, vii. 328 ; 
5. A. 730. 

bore, P. L. i. 528, iv. 591, vi. 
337, 485, 6*46, ix. 50$, 1 175 ; 
P. R. i. 26, ii. 71, iii. 314, 
iv. 542; S. A. 146, 1752; 
Lye. 58, 110; L'Al 16 ; II 
Pen/. 24; Cow. 633 ; Orf. Cir. 
24 ; Ep. M. JFm. 65. 

bore up, P. Z. vii. 470. 

Boreas, P. £. x. 699- 

born, P. L. ii. 797 ', iii- 463, iv. 
323, vii. 7,471,x. 584, 980, 
xi. 496, xii. 359 ; P. P. i. 
65, 140, 205, 245, 254, 341, 
ii. 72, iii. 152, iv. 506; S.A. 
II; Com. 1010; Son. x. 9; 
Orf. Ivar. 3 ; Orf. D. F. I. 25 ; 
Brut. 13; P/. Ixxxvii. 16, 
19, 24. See Firft-born. , 

borne, P. L. ii. 953, iii. 16, vi. 
33, 544, 776 , vii. 431, xi. 
764 ; P. P. iii. 93. 

borrow, Od. Cir. 8. 

borrow'd, P. L. i. 483, iii. 730, 
iv. 116. 

borrower, Com. 683. 

borrowing, P. L. vii. §77* 

boiky, Cow. 313. 

bofom, P. L. ii. 1036, iii. 169, 
239, 279, vii. 319, x, 225 ; 
P. R. iv. 597 ; S. A. 763 ; 
Cow. 23 ; Ep. M. Win. 69- 

bofom'd, P. L. v. 127 ; HAL 
78. 

bofoms, Cow. 368. 

Bofporus, P. L. ii. 1018. 

bofly, P. L. i. 716. 

botches, P. L. xii. 180. 

both, P. I. i. 239, 424, 489, 
767, ii. 540, 586, 605, 693, 
734, 824, 845, 942, iii. 101, 
109,110,123,132,146,292, 
316, 382, 448, 67 0, iv. 244, 
295, 407,498, 678, 6S0, 720, 
721, 722, 724, 990, v. 171, 
173,409,485,549,644,678, 



881, vi. 123, 170, 216, 29tf, 
316, 409,555, vii. 37,260, 
539, viii. 213, 221, 544, 6l3, 
ix. 275, 303, 370, 381, 421, 
68S, 709, 752, 779, 967, 
1008, 1009, 1072, x. 61, 69, 
96,101, 110, 133,209,282, 
384, 489, 542, 6l0, 6ll, 
635, 640, 812, 815, 816, 825, 
841, 924, 930, 999, 1000, 
1100, 1047. xi. 85, 273,376, 
46l, 645, 901, xii. 321, 403, 
460, 603, 606; P. R. ii. 484, 
iii. 225, 343, iv. 58, 172, 
197, 200, 410, 472, 535, 
633; S. A. 25, 33, 777, 
1465, 1505, 1587, 1635 ; 
Lye. 25, 27; L'Al. 123; Cow. 
405; Son. i. 14; x. 3, 4, 13, 
xi. 2; Od. Nat. 154, 201; 
Pf. iv. 38, lxxxii. 3, Ixxxvii. 
25. 

bottom, P. L. i. 236, 329, ii. 

882, iv. 19, vi.649, vii. 213, 
289,xi. 753 ; Lye. 157; Cow. 
833. 

bottom-glade* Cow. 532. 
bottomlefs, P. L. i. 47, vi. 866~ ; 

P. R. i. 361. 
bough, P. X. v. 8, 326, ix. 851, 

995. 
boughs, P. L. iv. 332, v. 214, 

428, ix. 579, 1089; Arc. 

50; Com. 349; Pf. lxxx. 43. 
bought, P. L. iv. 102, 222, 765. 
bound, P. L. ii. 236, iii. 256, 

539, iv. 171, 181, 897, v. 

290, vi. 358, 870, vii. 21, 

608, viii. 230, x. 297, xr. 

265, 291, xii. 370; P. P. iii. 

367, iv. 632; S. A. 26l, 365 f 

438, 715, 1184, 1209; Cow. 

816; Od. Nat. 169. 
bound to bound, P. R. iii. 315. 

without bound, P. L. ii. 892. 
boundlefs, P. L. i. 177, i»* 

423, vii. 16a. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



butinds, P. L. i. 466, 518, ii. 

644, 976, iii. 81,432, 538, iv. 

583, 878, 909, v. 478, 693, vi. 

716, 859, vii. 120, 167, 230, 

viii. 338, x. 365, 380, xi. 68, 

341,828, 894. xii. 187,371; 

P. R. i. 13, iii. 270; S. A. 

1714; Com. 673; Son. xvii, 

12; Pf Ixxxiii. 28. 
bounteous, P. Z>. v. 205, viii. 

492; Com. 176; Od. May- 

M.5. 
bounties. P. L. v. 330, 398 ; 

Com. 710, 987. 
bounty, P. L. iv. 437, v. 431, 

ix. 1033, x. 54; P. R. iii. 

142. 
bourn, Cow. 313. 
bout* UAL 139. 
bow,- P. L. i. Ill, iii. 321, 350, 

iv. 151, v. 607 ; vi. 713, 

763, ix. 390, xi. 865, 897 ; 

P. R. ii. 171; Com. 441, 

992; Pf. vii. 45, Ixxxi. 62, 

lxxxvi. 30. 
bow-bent, Vac. Ex. 69* 
bow'd, P.L. v. 144, ix. 524, 

xi.249;P.H. iv.418; S.A. 
. 1646; // Pen/. 71; Com. 

1015. 
bow'd down, P. L. i. 436. 
bowels, P. L. i. 687, ii. 800, 

863. 
bow'ft, S. A. 698. 
bowing, P. L. iii. 736, v. 360, 

vi. 746; P.P. i. 497. 
bowing down, P. L. i. 434. 
>o\ver, P. L. iii. 734, iv. 690, 

705, 738, 798, v. 230, 300, 

367, 375, viii. 510, 653, ix, 

401, 417, xi. 280, xii. 607. 

L'AL 87; IlPenf. 104; Arc, 

45; Com. 45, 921 ; S071. viii. 

9 ; P/ lxxxv. 47. 
bowers, P. L. iv. 24#, viii. 

305, ix. 244, x. 860, xi. 77- 

II Pettf. 27; Com. 536, 

984. 

VOL. I. C 



bows, P. R. iii. 305. 

boy, // Pen/. 124. 

boys, Hor. II. 2. 

brace, P. £. xi. 188. 

brag, Com. 745. 

braid, Com. 105. 

braided, P. X. iv. 349. 

braids, Com, 862. 

brain, II Pen/. 5. 

brains, S.A. 1241. 

brake, P. L. iv. 175, v. 326, 

vii. 458, ix. 160; Od. Nat. 

159. 
brakes, Com, 147. 
branch, P. L. vii. 433. 
branches, P. jL. iv. 627, vu 

575, vii. 325, viii. 265, ix. 

590, 802; Com, 969; Pf. 

lxxx. 45, 48. 
branching, P. L% iv. 1S9, vi, 

885, vii. 470, ix. 1104; 

P. ft. iv. 405; S,^. 1735; 

Arc. 89. 
brand, P. L. xii. 643; S. X 

967 ; Son. xv. 12. 
brandinYd, P. i. vi. 252, xii. 

633; Com. 651. 
brandifhing, P. L. ii. 786. 
brafs, P. L. ii. 645, vi. 576, 

xi. 565; S. A. 1120; I/. 

Penf. 114. 
braveries, 5. ^. 1243. 
bravery, S, A.- 717* 
bray'd, P. L. vi. 209. 
brazen, P. L. i. 724, vi. 211. 

vii. 201, 496, x. 697, xi. 

713; S.A. 35, 132. 
breach, P. L. vi. 879, ix. 6* 
bread, P. L. x . 205, 1055, xii. 

78; P. R. i. 343, 347, 349; 

Pf. lxxx. 22* 
breadth, P. X. ii. 893, iii. 56l t 

x. 673, xi. 730 ; P. H. iv. 27* 
break, P. L. ii. 134, iii. 545, 

v. 887, ix. 412; S.A. 116, 

750, 1349, 1626; Com. 481, 

651 ; Pf. Lxxxviii. 32. 
break'tt, Pf lxxxviii. 32. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



breaks, S.A. 1050; Com. 435. 
break off, Com. 145; Pf. ii. 

6. 
break loofe, P.L. iv. 8S9- 
breaking, P. L. i. 83, ii. 782 ; 

S.A. 1115; So*, x. 5. 
breaks, P. L. iii. 204, v. 6*12. 
breaft, P.L. ii. 568, iv. 16, 

495, v. 279, 695, vi. 550, 

612, vii. 438, ix. 288, 1131, 

x. 975, xi. 154,374; P. R. 

i. 185, 301, ii. 63, 167, iii. 

15; S. A. 60S, 1722; L'Al. 

73; Com. 246, 381, 911. 
breaft-plate, P. L. iii. 598. 
breads, P. L. ix. 730; 5. 4. 

1739. 
breath, P. L. ii. 170, 214, iv. 

641, 650, vii. 526, x. 784, 

739, xi. 147, 312, xii. 78 ; 

P. it. iv. 258; S. A. 10, 

628, 905, 1126, 1555; Arc. 

56; Ep. M. Win. 9 j Ep. 

Hobf. II. 25. 
breathe, P. L. ii. 402, iii. 607, 

v. 193, ix. 194,447, xi. 284; 

// Pen/. 151 ; Com. 245. 
breath'd, P. L. i. 554, iii. 267, 

vi. 65, vii. 525, ix. 193, xi. 

5, xii. 374. 
breathed, Od. Nat. 179. 
breathes, P. L. i. 709, ii. 244, 

v. 16, 482, xi. 313; L'Al. 

18. 
breathing, P. L. i. 560, iv. 265 ; 

Arc. 32. 
breaths, P. L. iv. 806. 
breath'ft, P. L. ii. 697. 
bred, P. L. ii. 799> iii. 431, v. 

4, ix. 1050, xi. 276, 414, 

6l8,xii. 115; P. R. ii. 300, 

415, iv. 2 -0,509, II Pen/; 2. 
breed, Com. 157, 266; Son. xv. 

10; Od.D.F. I. 6l. 
b*cding, P. L. ix. 1010; S.//. 

30. 
breeds, P. L. ii. 624. 
brethren, P. L. iii, 297, xi. 



454, 680, xii, 28, 65, 169; 

P. it. iii. 374, 403; S. A, 

332, 1413, 1445; Vac. Ex. 

75. 
brew'd, Com. 696. 
Briareos, P.L. i. 199. 
brick, P. L. xii. 43. 
bridal, P. L. viii. 520 ; S. A, 

1196. 
bridle, Com. 887. 
bride, S. <4. 320, II98 ; Com. 

1008. 
bridegroom, Son. ix. 12. 
bridge, P. L. ii. 1028, x. 301, 

351, 371. 
bridges, P. R. iii. 334. 
bridging, P.L. x. 310. 
brief, P. L. iv. 875, ix. 664, x. 

115; P.R. iv. 264, 485. 

in brief, P.L. vi. 171; S.A. 
1570. 
briefly, P. L. vi. 566; Com. 

512. 
brigad, P. L. i. 675. 
brigads, P. L. ii. 532. 
brigandine, S. A. 1120. 
bright, P. L. i. 87, 272, 429, 

440, 737, ii- 395, 513, 756, 

812, iii. 6, 362, 380, 512, 

518, 587, 591, 645, 655, iv. 

44, 361, 578, 590, 977, v a 

109, 274,481, 587,838, vi. 

16,64, 334, 472, 801, 885, 

vii. 222, 372, 385, 564, viii. 

87, 91, 98, 367, ix. 104, 

10S4, x. 63, 187,327, 426, 

615, xi.73, 127, 215, 221, 

329, xii. 254,627; P. R. i. 

128, 252; S.A. \67±;Lyc* 
• 30; L'Al. 121; IlPenf. 13; 

Arc. 18, 37; Com. 3, 382, 

683; Son. viii. 8; Od. Nat. 

21, 84; Od. D. F. I. 38; 

Ep. M. Win. 61, 69; Od. 

May-M. 1 ; Pf. iv. 30, viii. 

10, lxxxiv. 42. 
bright-hair'd, II Pcnf. 23. 
bright-harnefs'd, Od, Nat. 244, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lefs bright, P. L. viii. 376. 

hot bright, P. L. viii. 88. 
Wighten'd, P.L. viii. 368. 
brightening, P. L, ii. 399. 
brightens, P. L. ix. 634. 
brighter, P.L. vii. 132, x. 450. 
brighteft, P. L. iii. 134, 381, 

667, iv. 606, v. 644; P.P. 

iv. 439 ; Com. 910. 
brightnefs* P.L.i. 86, 592, iii. 

376, 624, iv. 836, v. 599> 
brim, Com. lig. 
brimmed, Com. 924. 
brimming, P. X. iv. 336. 
brimftone, P. X. i. 350. 
brinded,P.L. vii.466; Com > 443. 
brine, jLj/c. 98. 
bring, P. X. ii. 222, 639, 340, 

866, 899, iii- 158, 190,235, 

657, iv. 38, 470, 796, v. 335, 

Vi. 471, vii. 105, 189, viii, 

216, 343, 449, ix. 49, 162. 

630, 715, x. 655, 933. xi. 

.25, 302, 473, 477, 692; 

P. R. i. 64, 336, ii. 394, iii. 

244, 435; S. A. 183, 519, 

931, 1234, 1536; Lye. 142; 

L'AL 25 ; II Pen/. 132; Arc. 

9, 103; Cow. 186,305,987; 

Od. Nat. 4; Ep. M. Win. 

54 ; Pf. v. 33, lxxxi. 6, 7- 
bring back, P. L. xii. 312; 

P.P. iii. 435. 
bring down, Pf. lxxxi. 57. 
bring forth, P. L. i. 163, 217, 

v. 314, vi. 712, vii. 451, X. 

194, 195, 203, xi. 428, xii. 

551. 
bring in, P. L. x. 677- 
bring on, P. L. v. 233. 
bring to pafs, Vac. Ex. 72. 
bringing, P. L. xii. 414 ; P. R. 

ii. 268 ; S. A. 1444. 
bringing forth, P. L. x. 1052. 
brings, P. L. i. 252, ii. 981, iv. 

21, v. 217, 312, viii. 323, ix. 

47, 770, x. 900, xi. 860, 

%9$i Xii. 345, 355 ; P. P. 
c 



ii. 422, 460, iv. 323, 325; 

S.A. 1063, 1747; Lye. 96; 

Son. xv. 5 ; Vac. Ex.38. 
brings forth, P. L. v. 583. 
brink, P. L. ii. 609, 918, x, 

347* 
brifk, Com. 67I. 
bridled, P. X. vi. 82. 
briftles, S.A. 1137- 
Britifh, P. L. i. 581 ; P. P. iv, 

77; Son. xxi. 1. 
brittle, P. L. i. 427- 
broad, P. L. i. 286, ii. 1026, 

iii. 495. iv. 303, v. 279, vi. 

305, vii. 286, 289, 462, 577, 

ix. 1087, 1095, 1104, 1111, 

x. 298, 304, 473 ; P. R. ii. 

23; 6'. A. 1120; Lye. 80; 

Com. 354, 979 ; Son. ix. 2. 
broadeft, P. R. ii. 339. 
broider'd, P. L. iv. 702. 
broils, P. L. ii. 837, 1001, vi, 

277, xi. 71S. 
broke, P. L. ii. 690, iv. 878, 

vi. 311, vii. 465, ix. 895, x. 

353; P. P. iv. 43, 6ll ; 

S.A. 1189; Son. x. 6; Orf. 

Sol. Muf 21 ; £p. ifo^. II ; 

Pf. iii. 23. 
broke forth, P. L. xi. 869. 
broke loofe, P. L. iii. 87, iv. 

918. 
broke off, P. L. x. 1008. 
broke up, P. L. xi. 827. 
broken, P. X. i. 311, ii. 7S 9 

1039; P. P. i- 61 ; 5 A 

1335 ; Son. xv. 8. 
broken down, Pf lxxx. 50 
brood, P. L. i. 511, 576, ii. 

863, vii. 417; Od. D. F. I. 

55; Pf iv. 27, lxxxiii. 21. 
brooding, P. L. i. 21, vii. 235 ; 

L'AL 6; Od. Nat. 6' 8 ; P/ 

lxxxi v. 12. 
brook, P. L. i. 11, 420, ix. 

1184, xi. 325; P.P. ii. 266, 

345 ; S.A. 557; UPtrf 139; 

Com.\ 19,495 ; Pf lxxxiii. 3/. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



brooking, P. L. ix. 676. 

brooks, P. L. i. 302. iii. 30, iv. 
237; S.A. 1344 ;£yc. 137; 
Pf Ixxxvii. 27. 

brooks not, P. L. vi, 274. 

brother, P. L. iv. 757, xi. 609, 
679; Com. 407, 420; 493, 
684. 

brothers, Cow. 182, 226, 228; 
Vac. Ex. 82. 

brother's, P. L. xi. 456. 

brought, P. L. i. 3, 100. ii. 
598,' iii. 666", 452, iv. 713, 
717, 875, 908, v. 51, vi. 267, 
395, vii. 537, viii. 36, 447, 
500, 521, ix. 11, 224, 392, 
462, 475, x. 99, 312, 734, 
1037, xi. 168, 434, 837, xii. 
8.1, 504; P.P. i. 321, 335, 
ii. 269, iii. 34, 266, 350, 
389, iv. 22, 25, 396, 398, 
553, 577, 638 ; S. A. 269, 
375, 449, 451, 453, 821, 
955, IO94, 1585, 1600, 1615 ; 
Com. 506, 967; Son. xxiii. 
2 ; Pf. lxxx. 33. 

brought'ft, P. R. i. 10. 

brought back, Son. xxiii. 14. 

brought down, P. L. xi. 347; 
Pf. cxxxvi. 6l. 

brought forth, P. L. iii. 707, 
vii. 315, xii. 472; Pf. vii. 
54. 

brought on, P. L. v. 667. 

orouze, Pf. lxxx. 55. 

brow, 7\ L. iii. 546, iv. 885, 
vi. 51, viii. 56*0, ix. 537, xi. 
880; P.P. i. 493, ii. 16*4, 
216, iii. 214, iv. 367; S, A. 
1073; II Pen/. 58; Com. 532, 
619; Pf, viii. 7 ; lxxxi. 41. 

brown, P. L. ix. 1088; P. P. 
ii. 293, iii. 326; Lye. 2; 
11 Vcnf 134. 

t>rows, P. L. 1. 602 ; Com. 38, 

;.;6. 
bruife, P. L. v. 887, x. 1.81, 
1<>S,499, 1031, x. 191,500, 



xi. 155, xii. 149, 233, 383, 

385, 391, 430, 433. 
bruis'd, P. L. vi. 656; Pf. ii. 

20, lxxxviii. 59, 6l. 
brunt, S. A. 583. 
brufh, P. L. v. 42.9. 
brufh'd, P. L. i. 768. 
brufh off, Arc. 50. 
brutal, P. L. ix. 188, 565. 
Brute, Com. 451, 828. 
brute, P. L. i. 371, 459, vii. 

507, viii. 391, 441, ix. 96, 

240,554, 712, x. 165, 495; 

P. R. i. 219; S. A. 67$, 

1273; Com. 700, 797. 
brutifli, P. L. i. 481, vi. 124, 

xi. 518; P.R. iii. 86, iv. 

128; Com. 70; Od. Nat. 211. 
Brutus, Pntf. 7. 
bubbles, P. R. iv. 20. 
bud, P. L. viii. 45, xi. 277; 

Son. vii. 4 ; Ep. M. Win, 22. 
budge, Com. 707. 
buds, Com. 671. 
buffet, 6'. ^. 1238. 
build, P. L. i. 401, 751 r ii. 

170, iii. 468, iv. 521, vii. 

92, 424, viii. 81, 558, ix. 

102, xi. 729, 819, xii. 43; 

S.A. 1733; Lye. 11, 101. 
build up, P. L. ii. 314. 
builded, P. L. x. 373. 
builders, P. i.. iii. 466, xii. 57. 
building, P. L. xii. 6l ; S.A. 

1605. 
builds, P. L. vii. 491. 
built, P.L. i. 259, 443, 713,. 

749, iii. 449, iv. 212, vii. 

270, viii. 101, ix. 100, 152, 

485, xii. 102,527; P.R. ii. 

343, iii. 276, 290, iv. 239, 

2.92; Ep, IV. Sh. 8; Pf. 

Ixxxiv. 12. 
bulk, P. L, i. 196, vii. 410, xk 

729; S.A. 12.37- 
.bull (the) Ep. Hobf. I. 8. 
bullion, P. L. i.704. 
bullock, P. L. xii. 20. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



bulls, P. L. iii. 492, xii. 292 ; 

S.A. 1671. 
bulwark, P. L. ii. 29. 
burden, P. L. u. 767, iv. 57, 

ix. SOI, x. 835, 961, xi. 

767 ; P. Pt. ii. 462 ; S. A. 
■ 431; Son. xxi. 13; P/. Ixxxi. 

21. 
burdcn'd, P.L. v. 452. 
burdenous, 6'. A. 567. 
bu rdenfome, P. L. i v. 53 ; 5. A. 

54; £p. ifo//. II. 24. 
burgher, P. L. iv. I89. 
burial, 5.^ 1 04 ; Ep.M. Win. 32. 
buried, P. L. vi. 652; 5. ^. 

101, 103. 
burn, P. L. i. 474, iii. 334, v. 

713, ix. 1015, xii. 254; Od. 

Cir. 8; P/.lxxxv. 12. 
burn'd, P. L. i. 228, ii. 70S ; 

S. ^. 26. 
burning, P. L. i. 210, 296, ii. 

169, 436, 576, vi. 832; Od. 

Nat.S4>,207;Od.Sol.Mu/.lO. 

ever-burning, P. L.\. 69. 
burnim'd, P. £. iv. 249, ix. 501 . 
burns, P. L. ii. 538, 595, ix. 

467 ; Co??*. 130 
burnt, P. L. i. 562, vi. 866. 
burs, Com. 352. 
burit, P. L. x. 632 ; P. R. i. 

170 ; S.A. 1555, 1651. 
burit forth, P. L. i. 620. 
burit out, Lijc. 74. 
biirfting, P. X. vii. 419, ix. 9S, 

x.697. 
buriting forth, P. L. ii. 800. 
bum, P. L. vii. 323, ix. l60; 

P. P. iv. 37. 
bufhes, P. L. iv. 176. 
bulking, P. L. ix, 426. 
bufhy, P. i. iv. 696; Com. 31 2. 
bufied, P. L. iv. 876, ix. 518. 
bufieft, P. L. xi. 490. 
bufmels, P. L. i. 150. iv. 943 ; 

P.P. ii. 99; Com. 169 ; Vac-. 
. Ex. 57. 
Bufiris, P.L 307. 



bufkin'd, II Pen/. 102. 
buftle, Cow. 379- 
bufy, UAL 118 ; Orf. Nat. 92. 
buxom, P. L. ii. 842, v. 270; 

UAL 24. • 
by, P.L. ix. 1147. 



cabin'd, Corn. 140. 

cadence, P. Z. ii. 287, x. 92.'' 

Cadmus, P. L. ix. 506. 

Csecias, P. L. x. 699. 

Csfar, P. P. iii; 385. 

Calabria, P. L. ii. 66l. 

calamities, S. A. 655, 1331. 

calamitous, P. L. ix. 132 ; S. A. 
708, 1480. 

calamity, P.L. i. 189, x. 907. 

calculate, P. £. viii. 40. 

Cales, P. P.iv. 11 7. 

calf, P. L. i. 484. 

Califto, P. ii. ii. 186. 

call, P. L. i. 267, 378, iii. 185, 
727, iv. 35, 277, v. 48, 107, 
658, 76O, vii. 5, 132, 295, 
498, ix. 521, 522, 1020, x, 
462, 654, 858, xi. 67, 411, 
651,660, xii. 121, 140, 152, 
169,267, 310; P.P. ii. 27, 
385, iii. 434; S. A. 43, 836, 
1511, 1678; Lye. 134; U 
Pen/. 109; Son. i. 13, viii. 
6; On Time, 2 ; P/ iv. 1 ; 
lxxx. 76, lxxxi. 26, lxxxvi. 
10, 16, 22. 

call to mind, P. L. xi. S98. 

call up, P. L. iii. 603 ; II Pen/. 
109- 

call'd, P. L. i. 82, 300,314, 340, 
405,438, 740, 757, ii. 312, 
34S, 662, 667, 668, 760, iii. 
495, iv. 474, 514, 786, 865, 
v. 36, 579, 220, 307, 584, 
766, vi. 416, 60S, viii. 283, 

I 298, 458, x. 102, 425, 5S0, 
629, xi. 159, 609, 697, xii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



134, 156, 343, 378, 584; 

P.R.I 136, 166,329, ii. 3, 

123, ; v. 11 1,301, 516'; S. A. 

236; Cum. 131. 
call , / . X. x. 649; Com. 

207, 485. 
calling to mind, P. X. x. 1030. 
callow, P. X. vii. 420. 
calls, P.X. ii.92, 733, v, 21, 

» x . 172, xii. 57; Ep. 

M. Jim. 26; Vac. Ex.- 54,: 
callTt, P. L. ii. 742, 743, vi. 

289, Vitf. 069, ix. 1146; 

P.P. iii.403. 
calm, P. X- iii. 574, iv. 120, v. 

210, 733, vii. 234, 270, ix. 

920, 1125; P.P. ii.63, 81, 

iv. 425 ; S. A. 604, 1758 ; 

Lye. 98 ; Com. 4, 371 ; Od. 

Nat. 68. 
calm'd, P. X. xii. 595; S. A. 

964. 
calmer, P. L. ii. 1042; P. P. 

i. 103. 
calmefr, P. I. vi. 46l. 
calmly, P.P. iii. 43, Pf. lxxxv. 

10. 
calv'd, P. X. vii. 463. 
calves, P. P. iii- 4l6. 
calumnious, P. I,, v. 770. 
Camball, 27 P^/i 111. 
Cambalu, P. L. xi. 388. 
Ca-n bridge, *S'oh. xi. 14; JSp, 

/^/^ I. 8. 
Cambulcan, IlPenf. 110. 
Came, Ep. M. Win. 59- 
came, P. L. i. 354, 379, 438, 

446, 457, 490, 522, 760, ii. 

507, 508, 675, iii. 464, 46'9, 

520, 709, iv. 4, 167, 469, 
, 5()'4, 5.98, 918, v. 279, 

372, 37 8, 756, vi.75, 110, 
536, 655, 76S, viii. 277, 295, 

4S4- ; ix.N54,x. 96, 109,309, 
,349, xi. 19, 436, 437, 

719, 735; P. P. i- 22, 24 

, 297, 308, iv. 442; 

./. 143, 258, 337, 733, 



851, 1449, 1624, 1650, 1692 1 
Lye. 90, 108; Ccw?. 191, 292, 
510 ; Son. xxiii. 13 ; Ep. l)L 
Win: 19, 28 ; Pf. vi. 23. 

came down, P. X- iv. 9, vi. 
252, ix. 197. 

came forth, P. X. vii. 203, 475 ; 
P. P. 1. 502, iv. 427. 

came off, Com. 647. 

came on, P. X. vii. 5S3, XU 
584. 

came to pafs, Vac. Ex. 45. 

camel, P. R. i. 340. 

camels, P.R. iii. 335. 

cam'ft, P. X. ix. 563 ; S. A, 
1227, 1332; Com. 497 1 Od. 
P. F. I. 52- 

camp, P. X. i. 677> iii- 337, v. 
651, xi. 217 ; S. A. 1087, 
1436, 1497. 

Campanian, P. R. iv. 93. 

Camus, Lye. 103. 

can, P. X- i. 66, 96, 139, 153, 
185, 246, 255, 317, 424, 430, 
631,661, ii. 12,37,153,162, 
163, 188, 209, 235, 260, 273, 
410, 776, 814, 999, iii. 84, 
91, 112,233,246,387,619, 
682, iv. 22, 98,418, 517,518, 
527. 811, 855, 916, 1008, 
v* 97,99,160,362,441,505, 
514,518,531,532,534,673, 
678, 794, 797, 895, vi. 158, 
298, 349, 443, 464, 695, 703, 
734, vii. 107,113,152,179, 
603, 608, viii. 14, 365, 384, 
397,630, ix. 232, 284, 287, 
350, 368, 630,715, 727, 729, 
898,908,926,938,949, x. 5, 
242,251,262,645,731,796, 
798, 824, 827, 968, 1086, xi. 
179, 302, 309, 388, 507, 773, 
xii. 284, 290,395,401,493, 
5Q9, 556, 559; P. P. i. 60, 
150, 232, 265, 383, 476, ii. 
254, 382, 383,480, iii. 1 05, 
208, 223, 230, iv. 169,306, 
309, 333, 489, 530; S. A. 124, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



314, 583, 1005, 1051, 1136, 
1207,1230,1264,1291,1335, 
1534; Arc. 79; Com. 227, 
244, 319, 611, 669, 703, 760, 
995, 1013 ; Son. viii. 7, xv. 
10, xx. 13; Od.Nat. 177, 
216, 218, 228; Od. Cir. 7 1 
Od. D. F. L 29 ; Vac. Ex. 9, 
10,73, 90; Eurip.3, 4, 5, 
Eor. III. 2 ; Sen. 1 ; Pf vi. 
10, lxxxviii. 49. 

Canaan, P. L. xii. 135, 156, 215, 
269,309,315; Pf. cxiv. 3. 

Canaanite, P, L. xii. 217; S.A, 
380. 

Canace, II Pen/. 112. 

cancell'd, P. L. vi. 379. 

Candaor, P. R. Hi. 3l6\ 

canker, Lye. 45. 

canker'd, ^frc. 53. 

cannot, P. X. i. 117, ii, 269, 
vi. 347, vii. 178, viii. 347, 
388, 392, 432, ix, 700, 805, 
936, 958, x. 238, 783, 785, 
xii. 298, 299; S. .4. 735, 899, 
1258, 1426; Com. 226, 328, 
818 ; Vac. Ex. 77 ; Pf, Lxxxv. 
56. 

canon-laws, Com, 808. 

canopied, Com. 544. 

canopy, P. L. iii. 556. 

canft, P. L. iii. 281, iv, 448, 
v. 813, vii. 115, viii, 430, ix, 
533, xi.870, xii, ll6;P.P t . 
i. 471, 496, ii. 419, 421, 445, 
iii. 8, 180, iv. 184, 211 ; 
S. A. 486, 505, 709, 1593 ; 
L'Al. 151 ; Com. 236, 663 ; 
Od. D. F. I. 70. 

canft not, P. X. iii. 735, v. 76, 
vi. 284, xii. 128. 

cany, P. L. iii. 439. 

capable, P. L. viii. 49, ix. 283. 

capacious, P. L. vii. 290, ix. 
603. 

capacity, S. A. 1028. 

caparifons, P. X. ix. 35. 

cape, P. i. ii. 6il, viii, 631 o 



Cape of Good Hope, P. X. iv. 

160. 
Caphtor, S.A. 1713. 
capital, P. X. i. 756, ii. 924, 

xi. 343, xii. 383; S.4> 394, 

1225. 
Capitol, P.R, iv. 47. 
Capitoline, P. X. i.x. 508. 
Capreae, P. jR. iv. 92. 
Capricorn, P. X. x. 677* 
captain, Son. viii. 1. 
captains, <S. A. 1653. 
captive, P. X. i. 45$, ii. 323, 

iii. 255, iv. 9/0, vi. 260, x. 

188; P.R, i, 411, ii. 222, 

iii. 77, 283, 366, 414 ; S. A. 

335, 365, 426, 1393, 1474* 

1603. 
captiv'd, S. 4- 33, 694. 
captivity, P. X. x. 188, xii. 344; 

P. R. iii. 279, 415,420; S.A. 

108, 1744 ; Vac. Ex. 52 ; Pf 

lxxxv, 3. 
car, P. X. ix. 65 ; Com. Q5 ; 

Od. Nat. 24,1 ;Qd.D. F.I. 15. 
caravan, P. X. vii. 428 ; P. B. 

i. 323. 
carbuncle, P. X. iii, 596, ix. 

500. 
carcafs, P.X. iii, 259;P.P. i. 

325; S. A, 1097. 
carcaffes, P. X, i. 310, x. 277, 

xi, 654; S. A. 693. 
care, P. X. i. 601, ii. 48, 303, 

iv. 575, vi. 35, 822, ix. 318, 

799, 813, x. 37,979, 1057, 

Xi.776; P.P. i. Ill, ii. IS ; 
. S.A. 602,. 918, 923, 928; 

Lye. 64, 116 ; L'Al. 31, 135 ; 

Cow. 506, 6.17; Son. ix. 9, 

xxi. 12; Ep. M, Win. 30; 

Pf 1 xxx vii. 8., . 
card, P. X. ii. 4S, 
career, P. X. i. 766, iv. 353> 

RPenf 121; Son. vii. 3. 
careering, P. X. vi. 756. 
careful,' P. X. iv. 983, x, 438 •„ 

£./X'3?7. 



* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



carelefs, P. P. iv. 299, 450. 

carelefsly, S.A. 118. 

cares, P. L. viii. 185 ; P. P. ii. 

64,460, iv. g6; S.A. 805. 
carefies, P. P. viii. 56. 
carTr, S. A. 1488. 
Carmel, P. P. xii. 144. 
carnage, P. P. x. 268. 
carnal, P. P. viii. 593, ix. 1013, 

xi. 212, xii. 521 ; Com. 474. 
carnation, P. L. ix. 429 ; ■£/>• 

M. Win. 37- 
carol, P. L. xii. 367 ; Cow. 849- 
Carpathian, Corn. 872. 
-carpenter, P. P.. ii. 414. 
carriage, Ep. Hobf. I. 10. 
carrier, £/>. PM/i II. 20, 28. 
carries, S. A. 1073. 
carry, P. L. v. 870, xii. 671 ; 

Ep. Hobf. II. 18. 
carrying, .5. A 385. 
cart, Ep. Hobf. II. 22. 
Carthaginian, P. P. iii. 35. 
carvM, P. P. iv. 59- 
Cafbeen, P. L. x. 436. 
Cafella, Son. xiii. 13. 
cafli, P.L. iv. 188. 
Calms, P. P. ii. 593. 
cafcet, 0</. Paf. 44. 
Cafpian, P. P. ii. 7l6; P.P. 

iii. 271. 
Caffia, P. L. v. 293. 
Caflia's, Cow. 991. 
caft, P. P. ii. 286, 526, 604, 

678, ii. 122, 714, iii. 351, 

vi. 869, ix. 1014, x. 517, 

xii. 43; P. P. ii. 46, 180, 

iii. 326, iv. 6*1, 555, 575, 

005 ; S.A. 641 ; Lye. 134 ; 

It Pen/'. 43 ; Com. 30*0, 460 ; 

Od. Nat. 123; Pf ii. 7, 

vii. 39. 
Caft bark, .S'. ,4. 336. 
tali forth; P. L. ii. 889; P.P. 

i 228. 
call i 1 . l\ UPt if. 1 60 ; Son . X ii. 8. 
tafi »ff, P. /,. v. 786. 
cait out, P. ii. i. 3T, v. 6*13. 



Caftalian, P. P. iv. 2/4. 
cafts, P. P. i. 183, iii. 634, iv. 

702, vi. 272 ; Com. 225 ; Od. 

Nat. 170. 
cafual, P. L. iv. 767, ix. 223, 

xi. 566. 
cataphradts, S.A.1619. 
cataracts, P. P. ii. 176, xi. 

824. 
catarrhs, P. L. xi. 483. 
catch, P.L. xii. 88 ; Com. 953. 
catch'd, P. P. x. 544. 
caterefs, Com. 764. 
cates, P. R. ii. 348. 
Cathaian, P. L. x. 293, xi. 

388. 
cattle, P. L. vii. 452, 460, viii. 

582, x. 176, xi. 558, 6*53, 

xii. 179. 
cave, P. L. iv. 454, vi. 4, xi. 

46*9; P.P. i.307; S.A. 89; 

VAl. 3; Cow. 239; Od. 

Hor. 2. 
cave's, P. L. xi. 069. 
caverns, Cow. 429- 
caves, P.L. ii. 6*21, 789, iv. 

257, vii. 417, ix.118; P.P. 

iv. 414; Lye. 39. 
Caucafus, P.R. iii. 318. 
caught, P. P. ii. 180, xi. 5S7, 

xii. 637; P. R. iv. 541; 

S.A. 932', L'Al. 69. 
caught up, P. R. ii. 14. 
cavil, P. P. x . 759. 
caul'e, i. 28, iv. 14, 922, v. 702, 

vi. 31,67, 442, 804, vii. 64, 

90, viii. 270,417, 4<)7, 5<U, 

ix. 650,672,862, 1 140, 116's, 

X. 907, 935, 982, xi. 3S2, 
461, xii. 604; P. P. i. 66, 
ii. 239, 323, iv. 375; S.A. 
234,316,375,472,684,904, 

1179,1253,1321,1347,1379, 

1584,1586, 1709; Com. 489, 
79*; Dante, I. l ; Hor. 1. 4; 
P/i vii. 34, l.vw. 15, 31, 79, 
lxxxii. 10, Ixxxv. 15, 25. 
without cauic, S.A. 157. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



caus'd, P. L. iv. 216, v. 4G0; 
S.A.581 ,793 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 29- 
caufelefs, S.J. 701. 
caufes, P. L. ii. 913, iii. 707, 

ix. 682, 731, x. 806. 
caufey, P. L. x. 415. 
caution, P.L. v. 513, 523, vii. 

111. 
cautious, P. L. ix. 59 ; 5. ^. 

757. 
cautioufly, P. P. iv. 377- 
ceafe, P. L. ii. 100, 159, «t. 

27, v. 845, xi. 309, xii. 238 ; 

P. P. ii. 222, iv. 14; Od, 

Nat. 45 ; Od. D. F. I. 72 ; 

Vac. Ex. 86; Pf. vii. 34, 
• lxxxiii. 4, lxxxv. 15. 
ceafd, P. L. i. 283, ii. 43, 845, 

1010, iii. 344, vii. 436, viii. 

412, x. 910, xi. 126, 713, 

726, 780, xii. 372 ; P. R. i. 

456, ii. 235, iv. 507 ; Com. 

551; Od. D.F.I. 18; Ep. 
. Hobf. II. 10. 
ceafelefs, P. L. ii. 795, iv. 679, 

v. 1 83, x. 573 ; P/. lxxxviii. 7. 
ceafes, P. L. i. 176. 
eeafing, P. L. ii. 654. 
cedar, P. L. iv. 139, vii. 424, 

ix. 435, xii. 250; P.P. i. 306,- 

iv. 60. 
cedar'n, Com. 990. 
cedars, P. L. v. 260, ix. 1089 ; 

lxxx. 43. 
celebrate, P. L. ii. 241, xi. 345; 

Jrc. 88 ; Pf. vi. 10, 
celebrated, P. L. vi. 888; 6'.^. 

866. - 
celefiial, P. JL. i. 245, 658, ii. 

15. iii. 51,364, 638, iv. 553, 

682, 812, 1011, v, 249, 403, 

654, vi. 44, 333, 510, 760, 

vii. 12, 203, 254, 354, viii. 

455, 619, ix. 21, 540, x. 24, 

xi. 239, 296, 785 ; P. R. i. 

170, iv. 588; S. J. 1280; 

Jrc. 63 ; Com. 104 ; Od. Nat. 

145 ; Od. Sol. Muf 27. 



cell, P.L. v. 109, viii. 460; 
UAL 5 ; II Penf 169 ; Com. 
387; P/ iv. 41. 
cells, P. L. i. 700, 706, vii. 491. 
Celtick, P. L. i. 521 ; Com. 60. 
cenfer, P. X. xi. 24. 
cenfers, P. L. vii. 600. 
cenfure, 5. J. 787. 
cenfuring, 5. ^. 948. 
centaur, P. I. x. 328. 
center, P. L. i. 74, 6*86, iii. 

575, v. 510, 579, vi. 219, vi. 

219, vii. 215, 242, viii. 123, 

ix. 108, x. 740 ; P. R. iv. 

534; Jrc. 19; Com. 382; 

Od. Nat. 162. 
center'd, P. L. vii. 228. 
centrick, P.L. viii. 83, x. 671. 
centring, P. L. ix. 109. 
Ceraftes, P. L. x. 525. 
Cerberean, P. L. ii. 655. 
Cerberus, L'Jl. 2. 
ceremony, P. L. i. 753. 
ceremonies, P. L. xii. 297. 
Ceres, P. L. i v. 271, 98 l,ix. 395. 
certain, P. L. ii. 470, 597, iii. 

119, ix. 907, 953, x. 576 , 

980, xii. 437; S. J. 474, 

723, 1102; Com. 266, 482, 

573,619; BrwfcS. 
certainly, P. P. ii. 32. 
certainty, Com. 263. 
chafe, 5. J. 1246. 
chaf'd, 5. ^. 1138. 
chaff, P. L. iv. 985 ; Pf. i. 11. 
chain, P.L. ii. 1005, 1051. 
chain'd, P. L. i. 210, ii. 169, 

iv. 965, vi. 589 ; S. ^. 7. 
chain'd up, Com. 660. 
chains, P. L. i. 48, ii. 183, 

196; iii. 82, iv.970,vi. 186, 

260, 739, x. 319, xii. 454; 

S.J. 68, 1238; UAL 143; 

Cow. 804 ; So?i. xvi. 12 ; 

Vac. Ex. 52. 
chair, P. L. i. 764, ii. 930; 

P. P. iv. 219; Co?/?. 134; 

Od. D. P. /. 19. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Chaldea, P. L. xii. 130, 

challenge, S. A. 1151. 

challeng'd, P. JR. iv. 260. 

Chalybean, S. A. 133. 

Cham, P. L. iv. 276. 

chamber, Com. 101. 

chamber-ambuflies, 5. A. 1112. 

chambers, P. P. ii. 183. 

chamberlin, Pp. Hobf. I. 14. 

champain, P. L. iv. 134, vi. 2; 
P. R. iii. 257- 

champing, P. L. iv. 859- 

champion,^. .4. 556,705, 1152, 
1751. 

champions, P. X. i. 763, ii. 
424, 898. 

chance, P. L. i. 133, ii. 222, 
233,288,396,492,551,910, 
935,965,iv.403,530,vii.l72, 
ix.452, x. 108, 428; P. it. i. 
321, iv. 265, 559; S. A. 4, 
91 8, 1076, 1295; Com. 277, 
508, 588; Son. viii. 2; On 
Time, 22. 

chanc'd, P. L. ix. 423, 575 ; 
5. ^. 1203. 

chances, S. A. 656 ; Com,7g. 

change, P. I. i. 96, 244, 313, 
598, 625, ii. 222, 598, 599, 
820, iii. 125, 634, iv. 23, 367, 
640, 892, v. 89, 183, 336, 
629, 902, viii. 347, 525, ix. 
5, 70, 818, x. 107,213,273, 
54S, 677, 693, xi. 193, 308, 
539, 79±, P. P. ii. 86, iii 197, 
iv. 260, 442; S.A. 117,340, 
j>9£, 753, 1406; Com. 10, 
596,841; P/.lxxxi. 18, 
lxxxviii. 35. 

■/d, P. L. i. 84, 97, 253, 
H. 217, 276, iv. 115, 224, 
v. 644, vi.6l3, 824, vii. l60, 
ix. 505, xi. 712; Com. 69. 

changfd, Od* Har* §• 

I, /'. L. iv. 405, x. 6'92. 

*ing, P. ^/. ii. 1 12, x. 303, 
541. 



channel, Co?H.895;0<f.2W.124 t 

channels, P. L. vii. 303. 

chant, P. R. ii. 290. 

chaos, P. L. i. 10, 543, ii. 233, 
895, 907, 960, 970, 1038 ; 
iii. 18, 421,426, v. 577, vi. 
55, 871, vii. 93, 220, 221, 
272, x. 233, 2S3, 317, 34^ 
416, 477, 636 ; Com. 334. 

character, P. L. viii. 545. 

chara&er'd, Com. 530* 

characters, P. ft. 384; Qd. ?$$. 
49. 

charge, P. I. iii. 828, 688, iv. 
421, 562, 589, 787, 842, 879, 
v. 248, vi. 566. viii. 246, ix. 
157, 399, x. 35, 122, 421, 

650, xi. 99, 549, xii. 439; 
S. A. 849 ; Com. 32, 762 ; 
Fore, of Con. 19. 

in charge, P. R. i. 376. 
charg'd, P. L. vii. 46, x. 200. 
chariot, P. L. i. 311, iii. 394 ? 

522, vi, 100, 338, 358, 390, 

711,750, 829, 881, vii. 197; 

Com. 892 j Od. Nat. 56; Od. 

Pafs. 36. 
chariot-wheels, P. L. xii. 210. 
charioteer, P. L. vi. 39Q : Od, 

P. F. I. 8. 
charioting, S. A. 27. 
chariots, P. L. ii. 887, vi. 17, 

211, 770, vii. 199; P. #. iii. 

329- 
charity, P. L. iii. 2l6, xii. 584. 
charities, P. L. iv. 756. 
Charlemain, P. L. i. 5S6, P. i*. 

iii. 343. 
charm, P. L. ii. 460, iv. 642, 

651, viii. 533, ix. 999. 
charm, P. L. i. JS7, ii. 566; 

UPtnf. S3 ; CW/. 758, 853. 
chann'd, P.P. i. 061, xi. 132:; 

S. A. 1134. 
charmed, ('<>//>. 51. 904. 
charming, P. i,. iii. 308, v. 6*26> 

viii. 2, jx. 5H 5; P. & ii, 

36j ; CI'//?. -170 



VERBAL INDEX. 



charms, PJL. i\. 666, iv. 4<)8 ; 
P. R. ii. 213, iv. 257; S. A. 
427, 934, 1040 ; Com. 6l3. 
charms, P. L. ii. 556; Com, 

150, 664; Son. viii. 5. 
charnel, Cow?. 471, 
Charybdis, P. £. ii. 1020; Com, 

259. 
chafe, P. L. i. 557, iv. 341, vi, 
288, xi. 191 ; P. R, ii. 342, 
iv. 627; Pf lxxxiii. 58. 
chaf'd, P. Jl. iv. 429- 
chafte, P. i. iv. 761, xi. 12; 
Com. 146, 442, 450, 918 ; 
Dante II. 1, 
chaftening, P. L. xi. 12. 
chaftity, Com. 215, 420, 425, 

440, 453, 782, 909- 
chatting, Od. Nat. 87. 
chaunting, S. A, 1672. 
chauntrefs, II Pen/. 63. 
cheap, P. L. 472. 
cheat, Co7W. 155. 
Chebar, Orf. Pafs. $f. 
Check, P. £. v. 214; P. Jl. i. 
477, iv. 434; Com. ?6l ; P/. 
lxxxiii. 28. 
check'd, P. X. vi. 853. 
checks, P. X. iii. 732. 
Cheek, P. X. i. 602, iii. 641, v, 
10, 385, ix. 887; L'AL 29, 
II Pen/. 107; Od. D.F.I. 6. 
Cheek, (Sir John,) Son. xi. 

12. 
cheek-bone, Pf. iii. 21. 
cheeks, P. X. x. 1009 Com. 

750 ; P/ lxxx. 24. 
cheer, P. X, vi. 496. S. A. 

1613 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 26. 
cheer'd, P, X. iv. l65, v. 129, 
xii.604;P.P.iv.433;£.^. 
296. 
Cheerful, P. X. ii. 490, iii. 46, 
545, xi. 543 ; Com. 388 ; $o?i. 
xxi. 14 ; Pf. Ixxxi. 7. 
more cheerful, P. X. v. 123. 
cheering, Com, 34S. 



cheerly, L'^/. 54. 
cheers, S. A. 545. 

arch-chemick, P. X. iii. 6©9. 
Chemos, P.L. i. 406. 
chequer'd, X'4/- $6. 
chere, Com. 995. 
cheriih, P. X. x. 10$8 ; S. A. 

cherifhing, P. X. viii. 569. 

cherith, P. R. ii. 266. 

Cherfonefe, P. X. xi. 392 ; P. P. 
iv. 74. 

cherub, P. I. I 157, 324, 534, 
iii. 636, iv. S44,£71,vi. 771, 
vii. 1£8; II Penf. 54; Od. 
Pafs. 38. 

cherubjck, P. £. v. £47, vi. 413, 
753, ix. 6$, xi. 120; Od. Sol. 
Muf. 12. 

cherubim, P. £. i. 387, 66$ y 
794>, ii- 516, iii. 666, iv. 778, 
vi. 102, 535, vii. 218, ix. 6l, 
xi. 100, J2S, xii. 254,628; 
Od. Nat. 112. 

cherubs, Pf. lxxx. 5. 

cheft, Od. Nat. 217. 

chew, P. I. iv. 335. 

chew'd, P. X. X. 066. 

chewing, Co?w. 540. 

chide, Son. xjx. 6; Pf. lxxxv, 
16. 

chief, P. X. i. 128, 381, 524, 
566, 762, ii. 469, 487, 527, 
iii. 29, 168, 664, iv. 550, 
864, 920, v. 102, 684, vi. 
233, 745, vii. 515, ix. 29, x. 
455, 537 ;xi. 493,617; P- P. 
ii.464; 5. A. 457, 554; 754, 
1249 ; Son. xvi. 1 ; Od. D. 
F.I. 3; Ep.Hobf 11.21. 

chief of all, P. R. 66. 

Chiefeft, II Penf 51 ; Vac. Ex. 
18. 

chiefly, P. I. i. 17, ii. 7^3, ii 
663, iv. 445, 566, 790, S40, 
ix. 3/9, 878, 981, x. 401, 
xii. 272, 599; P-R- i. 262, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



iii. 123; S. A. 1452; Pf 

lxxxiii. 11. 
child, P.R. i. 201; S.A.9W; 

L'Al. 133; Od. Nat. 30; Od. 

D.F.I. 71. 
child-bearing, P. X. x. 1051. 
child-bed, Sow. xxiii. 5. 
childhood, P. P. iv. 220, 508. 
childifti, P. it. i. 201 ; Vac. 

Ex. 3. 
chilcllefs, P.L. x. 989, 1037; 

Orf. P. P. P. 13. 
children, P. X. x. 194, 330, xi, 

761, 762; P. R. iv. 330; 

5. A. 352 ; Cow. 720, 763. 
childrens, P. X. i. 395. 
chill, P.L. ix. 890; Arc. 49; 

Com. 352 ; Od. Nat. 195. 
chill'd, P. X. v. 65. 
chilling, P. X. x. 264. 
chimaeras, P. X. ii. 628 ; Com. 

517. 
chimney, UAL 81. 
chimney's, X'^/. 111. 
chime, P. L. xi. 559 ; Com. 

1021 ; Od. tfa*. 128; Od. 

£0/. Muf 20. 
chiming, P. P. ii. 363. 
chin, Od. Nat. 231. 
Chinefes, P. X. iii. 438. 
Chios, P.P. iv. 118. 
chivalry, P. X. i. 307, 7^5, iii. 

344. 
Choafpes, P.P. iii. 288. 
Chaeronea, Son. x. 7- 
choice, P. L. i. 26l, 653, 759, 

ii. 19,415,423,524, iii. 108, 

534, 6'70, iv. 43 1, v. 327, 333, 

499, vii. 48, viii. 335, 400, 

ix. 214, 620, 992, x. 766, 

904,978, xi. 101 ; P.R. iii. 

314, iv. 329; S. A. 3, 311, 

555,633, 1030, 1654, 1743; 

Sun.w. 9; Pf. v.7, lxxxi.48. 
choiceft, P. L. v. 127, 368, ix. 

840, xi. 438; P. R. i. 302, 

ii. 334, iv. 437; S. A. 201 ; 

Tac\ Ex. 22. 



choofe, P. X. i. 428, ii. 60, 
265, iii. 123, v. 333, 534, 
787, ix. 221, 316, xii. 225, 
646; P. R. iii. 370; S. A, 
1478; IlPenf 176; Pf. iv. 
16. 

choofes, S. A. 513. 

choofing, P. X. ix. 26, x. 1005, 
xii. 219. 

choral, P. X. v. 162, vii. 599. 

chords, P. X. xi. 56l. 

chorus, P. X. vii. 275 ; P. P. iv. 
262. 

chofe, P. X. iv. 72, 406, 691, 
viii. 54, ix. 88, 1100, 1167, 
xi, 587; P. R. i. l65; ii. 
397 ; S. A. 878, 985 ; Od. 
Nat. 14 ; P/. iv. 13, 14. 

chofen, P. X. i. 8, 318, iii. 183 ; 
P. R. i. 427, ii. 45, 236, iv, 
614 ; S. A. 368 ; Son. ix. 6 ; 
P/I cxxxvi. 57- 

Chrift, Fore, of Con. 6. 

chryfolite, P. X. iii. 596. 

church, P. X. iv. 193. 

chuf'e, Vac. Ex. 29. 

cieling, P. X. xi. 743. 

Cimmerian, L'Al. 10. 

cincture, P. X. ix. 11 17. 

cinders, P. X. x. 570. 

cinnamon, Com. 937, 

Circe, Com. 50, 153, 253, 522. 

Circe's, Com. 50. 

Circean, P. X. ix. 522. 

circle, P. X. iv. 578, v. 182; 
Arc. 15 ; 5W/. viii. 8. 

circle, P. X. v. l63. 

circled, P. X. iii. 626, v. 862, 
ix. 65. 

circles, P. L. v. 631, vi. 305, 
viii. 107, x. 681. 

circlet, P. X. v. 169. 

Circling, P. X. ii. 647, iii. 556, 
iv. 146, vi. 3, 743, vii. 342, 
5S0, ix. 502; P. JR. i. 57, 
171 ; 5.-4. 871. 

circuit, P. X. ii. 1048, iii. 721, 
iv. 586, 784, v. 287, 595, vif„ 



VERBAL INDEX. 



%66, 301, viii. 100, 304, ix. 

323; P. P. iii. 254. 
circular, P. X. ix. 498 ; Od. 

Nat. 110. 
circumcifd, S. A. 975. 
circumcifion, P. P. iii. 425. 
circumference, P. L. i. 286, ii. 

353, v. 510, vi. 256, vii. 231. 
circumfluous, P. X. vii. 270. 
circumfuf d, P. X. vi. 778, vii. 

624. 
circumfcribe, P. X. vii. 226. 
circumfcrib'd, P.L. v. 825. 
circumfpeclion, P. X. ii. 414, 

iv. 537, vi. 523. 
circumftance, S. A. 1557- 
circumvent, P. X. ix. 259 ; 

S.A. 1115. 
circumvented, P. X. iii. 152. 
citadel, P. X. i. 773 ; P. P. iv. 

49. 
cited, P. X. iii. 327. 
cities, P. X. i. 496, ii. 533, xi. 

640; P.R. ii. 470, iii. 74, 

26l, iv. 363; HAL 117 '. 
citron, P. L. v. 22 ; P. P. iv. 1 15. 
city, P. X. ii. 924, ix. 445, x. 

424, xi. 386, 410, 655, 66l, 

xii. 44, 51,340, 342; P.P. 

ii. 21, 22, 300, iii. 285, 311, 

iv. 33, 44, 238, 243, 545; 

S.A 1194, 1449,1561, 1596, 

1655 ; Pf. lxxxvii. 9. 
civil, P. X. vi. 667, xi. 718, xii. 

231 ; P. P. iv. 358 ; S. A. 

853, 1367, 1467, Son. xvii. 

10; Fore, of Con. 5. 
civil-fuited, II Pen/. 122. 
civility, P. P. iv. 83. 
clad, P. X. i. 410, iv. 289, 599, 

v. 278, vii. 315, x. 216, 450, 

xi. 17, 24P; P. P. ii. 65, 299, 

352, iii. 313; S. A. 129, 

1317, 1616; Arc. 92; Com. 

421 ; Son. xiv. 10 ; Otf. D. 

F. I. 58 ; Ep. M. Win. 73. 
claim, P. X. ii. 32, 38, iv. 487, 

v, 723, xi. 2$S, xii. 170. 



claimed, P. X. i. 533, ix. 1130, 
claims, P. X. ix. 566. 
claiming, P. X. xii. 35. 
claim'ft, P.L. ii. 81 7. 
clamorous, P. X. x. 479« 
clamour, P. X. vi. 208, vii. 36, 

xii. 853 ; P. P. ii. 148. 
clamouring, ,5. A. 1621. 
clamours, P. X. ii. 862. 
clang, P. X. vii. 422, xi. 835 , 

Od. Nat. 157. 
clans, P. X. ii. 901. 
clarion, P. X. vii. 443. 
clarions, P. X. i. 532. 
clafli'd, P. X. i. 668. 
clafhing, P. X. vi. 209. 
clafp, P.L. x. 91 8. 
clafping, P. X. ix. 217. 
claffick, Fore, of Con. 7. 
clatter'd, £. A. 1124. 
clay, P. X. ix. 176, x. 743; 
P.P. i. 501 ; Com. 339; 0<Z. 
Nat. 14. 
cleanfing, £. ^. 1727. 
clear, P. X. ii. 770, iii. 28, 188, 
595, 620, iv. 119, 45S, v. 
733, vii. 619, viii. 336, ix. 
6*81, 706, xi. 844, xii. 376; 
S. A. 550 ; Lye. 70 ; L'AL 
126; IlPenf. 16*3; Com. 381, 
722; 60;?. xxii. 1, xxiii. 12; 
Pf. lxxxi. 1 ; lxxxvii, 28, 
cxiv. 9. 
clear'd, P. X v. 136, viii. 179, 

ix. 708 ; Son. xv. 12. 
clear'd up, P. P. iv. 437. 
clearer, P. X. xi. 413. 
cleareft, P. X. xi. 379. 
cleave, P. P. iii. 436. 
clearly, Fore, of Con. 19. 
cleaving, S. A. 1039. 
cleft, P. X. xi.440; P. P. iii. 

438; Pf. exxxvi. 45. 
Cleombrotus, P. X. iii. 473. 
cliff, P. X. i. 517, iv. 547, v* 

275, xii. 639. 
cliffs, P. X. vii. 424; P. iUii. 
317- 



VERBAL INDEX. 



climate, P. X. ix. 45, xi. 274. 
climb, P. X. iv. 193, 548, ix. 

217; Lye. 115. 
climbing, P. L. x. 559- 
climbs, P. X. iv. 191, xi. 119. 
climb'lt, P. X. v. 173. 
clime, P. L. i. 242, 297, ii. 572, 

v. 1, vii. 18, x. 678, xii. 636'; 

Arc. 24 ; So?i. viii. 8 ; Cow/. 

1020; On Time, 19. 
climes, P. X. xi. 708; Com. 

977. 
clip, Fore, of Con. 17. 
clod, P.X. x.786. 
clods, P. X. vii. 463, xi. 565. 
clogs, SV>#. xii. 1. 
clomb, P. X. iv. 192. 
clofe, P. X. i. 646, 795, ii. 485, 

537, 638, iv. 347, 376', 405, 

708, 800, v. 36, 673, vi. 235, 

ix. 191, x. 589, xi. 419; 

P. R. ii. 28; S. A. 8, 651, 

1748; // Pen/. 139; Com. 

197, 349, 548 ; Son. xi. 2, 

15; Od. Nat. 100. 
clofe-banded, S. A. 1113. 
clofe by, P. X. ii. 1053. 
clofc-curtain'd, Com. 554. 
clos'd, P. X. iii. 144, vi. 330, 

875, viii. 459,460; P.R. iv. 

481 ; Lye. 51. 
doling, P. X. iv. 863, vi. 436. 
clothe, P. L. x. 299 ; Son. xx. 

7 ; Vac. Ex. 32. 
cloth'd, P. L. i. 86, ii. 226, x. 

1059. 
clothing, Vac. Ex. 82. 
clotted, S. A. 1728 ; Com. 467. 
cloud, P. X. i. 340, ii. 936, iii. 

/1 .0,262, 378, iv. 151, v. 122, 

257, 686, vi. 28, 539, vii. 

247, 422, ix. 425, x. 32, 449, 

xi. 205, 229, 670, 706, $65, 

882, 8.96, vii- 185, 202, 20:3, 

208,256; P. Jt.iti.gft2, iv. 

321 ; 11 Penf. 72 y 125; Cow. 

221, 333; Son. xvi. 1 ; 0d. 

Pay. 56 ; P/ lxxx. 7* 



without cloud, P.L. iii. 385, 
xi. 45, 

clouded, P.L. iv. 607, xii. 333. 

cloudlefs, S.A. 1696. 

clouds, P. X. ii. 264, 488, 535, 
637, 714, iv. 500, 544, 597 y 
v. 86, 189, 642, Vi. 56, vii. 
287, 599, viii. 146, x. 702, 
1073, xi. 739, 841, xii. 77 y 
54,5; P.R. i. 41, 81, iii. 327, 
iv. 410, 429, 619 ; L'Al. 62, 
74 ; Com. 301 ; 0<i Nat. 50, 
146, 159; Orf. Or. 4; P/. 
lxxxi. 30. 

cloudy, P. X. ii. 930, v. 266, 
vi. 107, 409, 450, vii. 248, 
360; Com. 134; Od. Nat. 
230 ; Od. D. F. I. 56. 

cloven, P. L. vi. 36l ; Lye. 34, 

clouted, Com. 635. 

cloy'd, Pf. lxxxviii. p. 

cloyfters, II Penf. 156. 

clung, P. L. x. 512. 

cluttering, P. L. iv. 303, vii. 
320 ; S. A. 569 ; Co?n. 54. 

clufters, P, X. i. 771, v. 218; 
Com. 296. 

Clymene, P. #. ii. 186* 

coal, P. X. v. 440. 

coals, P. jR. ii. 273. 

coaly, Vac. Ex. 98. 

coarfe, Co?;?. 749. 

coaft, P. X. i. 306, 340, 464, 
ii.633, 958, iii. 487, 739, iv. 
782, v. 340, vi. 529, i*. 67, 
x. 89, 293; P. It. ii. 347; 
Pf. lxxxiii. 34, exxxvi. 67. 

coafting, P.L. iii. 71 ; Com. 49. 

coafts, P. X. ii. 464, viii. 245; 
Pf. Ixxxiv. 15. 

com, P. X. v. 341, vi. 542, x. 
218. 

COftts, P.L. vii. 406; P.'Jfciii. 
312. 

cock, P.L. vii. 443; L'Al. 49, 
114; Cow. 346. 

Cocytus, P. X. ii. 579, 

coeternal, P, X. iii. 2* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



coffers, Vac. Ex. 31. 
cogitation, P.L. iii. 629. 
cohort, P. L. xi. 127- 
cohorts, P. R. iv. 66. 
c©in, S. A. 189, 1204; Com, 

739. 
cold, P. L. i. 516, ii. 595, 898, 

vii. 238, ix. 44, 636, x. 294, 

653, 686, 691, 851, 1056, 

1070, xi. 293, 544 : P. R. iv. 

31,403; Com. 353, 802, 91 8; 

Son. xviii. 2. 
cold-kind, Od. D.F.I. 20. 
colick-pangs, P. L. xi. 484. 
Colkitto, Son. xi. 9- 
collateral, P. L. viii. 426, x.86. 
colleague, P. L. x. 59. 
colled, P. H. iv. 524. 
colle&ed, P.L. vi.581, ix. 673. 
colletting, P. L. iv. 986; P. £. 

iii. 5. 
collifion, P. L. x. 1072. 
colloquy, P. L. viii. 455. 
Colonel, 5on. viii. 1. 
colour, P. L. iii. 612, vi. 352, 

x. 870 ; P. ft. ii. 176. 
colourM, P.L. iii. 642, iv.702, 

vii. 445, xi. 879- 
colours, P. L. i. 546, iv. 149, 

v. 24, 283, vi. 759, vii. 318, 

ix. 577, xi. 866; S.A. 901; 

Com. 300. 
Columbus, P. L. ix. 1116. 
column, S. A. 27. 
colure, P. L. ix. 66. 
comb, Com. 880. 
combat, P. jC. i. 766, vi. 315 ; 

S.A. 1106, 1152, 1176. 
combatant, S. A. 344. 
combatants, P. L. ii. 719» 
combated, S. A. 864. 
combined, P. L. ii. 750, viii. 

394, ix. 339. 
combines, S. A. 1048. 
combuftible, P. L. i. 233. 
combuftion, P. L. i. 46, vi. 225. 
come, P, L.ii. 715, 822,970, iv. 



580,841,923, v. 118,138,291, 
^98, 493, 770, vi. 609, viii. 
79,298, 372, ix. 366, 413, 
610, 1027, x. 107, 276, xi. 
114, 260, 344, 357, 454, 528, 
704, 815, xii. 11, 258, 36i; 
458,584, 600 ; P. R. i. 75, 
138, 271, 409, 484, ii. 17, 
33, 43, 112, 375, iii. 204 r 
397; S. A. 180, 704, 725, 
785,1076,1088,1229,1262, 
1315, 1332, 1342,1395,1397, 
1405, 1448, 1566, 1681 j Lye. 
3 ; L'Al. 33, 45 ; 17 Pen/. 31, 
37; Com. 125, 143,491,599, 
735, 806, 943, 996; Od. 
Nat. 90 ; Vac. Ex. 9, 57, 61 ; 
Ep. Hobf. I. 12, II. 23 ; Pf. 
lxxx. 11, lxxxiii. 13, lxxxv. 
55, lxxxvi. 30. 

come, come, S. A. 1708. 

come down, P. R. iv. 6l5. 

come forth, P. L. x. 108 ; P. R, 
i. 331; L'Al. 97. 

come off, S. A. 1380. 

come ihort, P. L. viii. 414. 

come to pafs, P. L. x. 38 ; 
S. A. 444. 
to come, P. R. i. 300. 

comelinefs, P. L. viii. 222 
S. A. 1011. 

comely, P. _L. ix. 668 ; S. A. 
1268 ; //. Pen/. 125 ; Com. 75. 

comers, Com. 1007. 

comes, P. L. i. 66, 67, ii. 663, 
iii. 231, iv. 131,869, v. 310, 
645, vi.540, ix. 225, x. 814, 
854, 858, xi. 366, 785, xii. 
160, 393 ; P. R. I 199, 484, 
iii. 204, 398, iv. 146; S.A. 
326, 713, 1070, IO74, 1304, 
1441 ; Lye. 75 ; Com. 168 ; 
Od.May^M.2; Pf. Ixxxi. 12. 

comes down, P. L. xii. 51. 

com'ft, P. L. iv. S24, Vi. 159 ; 
P. R. i. 410, iii. 298. 

comet, P. L. ii. 70S, xii* 63L 



VERBAL INDEX. 



comfort, Pf lxxxvi. 64. 

comfortable, P. L. x. 1077. 

comforter, P. L. xii. 486. 

conifortlefs, P. L. xi. 76*0. 

comfort's, P. L. x. 1084. 

coming, P. X. iii. 232, iv. 7, 
6467 v. 78 L, vi. 6l0, 648, 
768, vii. 209, viii. 46, ix. 
647, x. 104, xi. 233, 250., 
xii. 405; P.P. i. 71, iv. 204; 
S.A. 18S, 13^5, 1452; Com. 
35, 99*. 

command, P.L. i. 566, 752, ii. 
S51,iii.94,650,iv.864,v.551, 
685, vi. 61,781, vii. 47, 294, 
viii. 232, 329, 371, 635, ix. 
652, 1156, x. 430, xi. 385, 
818, xii. 210; P. P. i. 342, 
ii. 149, 382, 384, iv. 556, 
630; S. A. 57, 1212, 1371, 
1394; Com. 41 ; Pf. vii. 24. 
in command, P. P. i. 449. 

commanded, P. L. v. /68, ix. 
652 ; S. A. 852. 

commander, P. L. i. 358, 589- 

cammamling, P. L. v. 699, vi. 
557, xii. 265; Pf. viii. 19. 

commandment, P. P. iv. 176. 

commands, P. L. i. 531, ii. 856, 
iii. 614, iv. 524, 747, v. 691, 
806;S.A. 1337,1372,1405, 
1640. 

command'ft, P. L. ix. 570. 

commend, S.A. 247; L'Al. 
124. 

commended, Com. 831. 

commends, P. L. ix. 754. 

commercing, UPenf. 39. 

commiferation, P. L. x. 940. 

commiffion, P. />. vii. 118. 

commit, P. /,. viii. 26; P. J*. 
i. Ill, ii. 233. 

committed, P. /,. \. 957 ; 5.^/. 
47, 1000, 1185. 

committing, /'. R. iv. 95; Son. 
xiii. 4. 

commits, Com. 25. 

coinmodioufly, P. P. x. 10S3. 



common, P. L. ii. 371, iy. 752. 

v. 435, vii. 426, viii. 583, 

597, ix. 931 ; S.A.674,,-777* 

856, ll6l, 1416. 
commonalty, P. P. vii. 489^ 
commotion, P. L. iv. 99%, vi. 

310, 706, viii. 531. 
commune, P. X. ix. 201. 
commun'd, P. P. ii. 26l. 
communicable, P. P. vii. 12 4. 

P. P. i. 419, iii. 125. 
communicated, P. L. v. 72, ix. 

755. 
communicating, P. Z. viii. 150. 
communication, P. P. viii. 429- 
communion, P. P. v. 637, viii. 

431. 
compact, P. L. ix. 635. 
companion, P. L. v. 673, vi, 

907. 
companions, P. L. i. 76, vi. 

419 ; P. P. i. 398. 
company, P. P. viii. 446 ; S. A. 

556, 1413; Com. 274,508. 
compare, P. X. i. 588, ii. 921, 

iii. 138, v. 432, 467, vi. 705, 

ix. 228 ; P. R. iv. 346, 563. 
compar'd, P. L. iii. 592, vi. 

170, viii. IS, x. 306 ; P. P, 

i. 200, ii. 348 ; S. A. 441, 

1020. 
comparing, S.A. 464. 
companion, P. L. viii. 92. 
compafs, P. L. iii. 342, iv. 559, 

viii. 33; P.R. iv. 51; S, ^f. 

1477 ; Vac. Ex. 56. 
compafs'd, P. X. ii. 862, vii. 

27; P.P. i. 58. 
compafTes, P. P. vii. 225. 
com pamng, P. P. ix. 59, xi. 

352. 
companion, P. P. iii. 141, xi. 

496. 
compeer, P. P. i. 127. 
compeers, P. P. iv. 974. 
compel, P. L. vi. 619. 
compell'd, P. L. ix. 609, xii* 

175; Com. 275, 633. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



compels, P. X. iv. 391 ; Lye. 7. 
competition, S.A. ^(6. 
complacence, P. X. iii. 276, 

viii. 433. 
complain, P. X. ii. 550 ; S. A. 

46, 47, 157; Od. Hor. 6. 
complaining, Pf. v. 3. 
complaint, P. X. x. 131,719; 

S. A. 662. 
complete, P. X. v. 352, viii. 

548, x. 10; P.R. iv. 283; 

S. A. 558 ; Com. 421 ; £p. 

M. Win. 12. 
completed, P. X. xi. 6lS. 
completing, P. X. ix. 1003. 
complexions, Com. 749* 
compliance, P. X. viii. 603, ix. 

994; S.A. 1411. 
compliant, P. X. iv. 332. 
complicated, P. X. x. 523. 
compliments, P. P. iv. 124. 
comply, S. A. 1407 ; ^n\ 38. 
compofe, P. X. ii. 281. 
compos'd, P. X. i. 483, ii. Ill, 

iv. 46*9, xii. 596; P.R. i. 

407, ii- 108. 
eompofition, P. X. vi. 6l3; 

P. P. iv. 529- 
compofure, P.X. vi . 560,ix . 272. 
comprehend, iii. 705, v. 505, 

vii. 114. 
compulfion, P. X. ii. 80, ix. 

4/4 ; Arc. 68. 
compute, P. X. iii. 580, vi . 685, 

viii. 16. 
comrades, S.A. 11 62. 
Comus, Com. 58, 522. 
concave, P. X. i. 542, ii. 635. 
conceal, P. X. iv. 123, viii. 73, 

x. 130, 136; Arc. 13. 
conceal'd, P. X. i. 641, ii. 187, 

iv. 312, v. 20/; S. A. 99S ; 

Com. 142. 
concealing, P.P. iv. 474. 
conceals, P. X. ix. 751 ; P.P. 

ii.9<>. 
conceits, P. X. iv. 809 ; P. P. 

iv. 295; P/.lxx.xi. 51. 

VOL. 1. 



conceive, P. X. vii. 281. 
conceiv'd, P. X. ii. 627, 766, 

796, ix. 945; P.R. i.239, 

ii.67; 5.^f.390,1506, 1574; 

P/. vii. 52. 
conceives, P. X. ix. 449. 
conceiving, P. X. i. 234, v. 666 9 

vi. 787^; P. it. iv. 597 ;Ep. 

W. Sh. 14. 
concentring, P. X. ix. 106. 
conception, P. X. x. 194, 987; 

S.A. 1434. 
conceptions, P. X. vi. 512. 
concern, P. X. vii. 62, viii. 196, 

xi. 144, xii. 272, 599^ 
concerned, P. X. viii. 82, x. 

170; P.R. i. 440; S. A. 

1420, 1551. 
concerning, P. X. x. 199; P- ■& 

i. 261, iv. 557. 
concernments, S. A. 969' 
concerns, P. X. v. 721, viii 

174; P. P. i. 293, iii. 193, 

iv. 205; S.A. 1148. 
conclave, P. X. i. 795. 
conclude, P. X. ix. 1142, xii. 

292. 
concludes, P. X. x. 839- 
conclud'ft,P. P. ii.317. 
concocl, P. X. v. 412. 
concocted, P. X. vi. 514. 
concoclive, P. X. v. 437. 
concord, P. X. ii. 497, iii. 371, 

vi. 311, xii. 29; S.A. 1008. 
concourfc, P. X. xi. 641 ; P. ii. 

iv. 404. 
concubine, S.A. 537. 
concupifcence, P. X. ix. 1078. 
concurr'd, P. X. x. 747. 
concurring, P. X. ii. 831, x. 44, 
condemn, P. X. v. 813; S.A. 

500. 
condemnation, P. P. iii. 136; 

S. A. 696. 
eondemn'd, P. X. i. 607, ii, 

86, 694, x. 82, 823, xii. 412 ; 

P.P. iii. 213; S. A. 1224. 
condemning, S. A. 844. 
d 



VERBAL INDEX, 



condemns, P. L. ii. 20. 
condenfe, P. L. vi. 353. 
coudenfd, P. 1. i. 429. 
condenfes, P. L. ix. 636. 
condefcend, 5. A. 1337- 
condefcenfion, P. L. viii. 9, 649. 
condition, P. X. iii. 181, viii. 

176, ix. 332 ; P. R. iv. 166, 

173 ; Co;;?. 6*85. 
conditions, P. X. x. 759; S. A. 

258. 
condole, & A. 1076. 
conduct, P. X. i. 130, vi. 777 y 

ix. 630 ; P. P. iii. 18 ; CW. 

319- 
conduced, P. X. xii. 259- 
cone, P. X. iv. 776. 
confer, P.L. i. 774; P.P. i. 

278. 
conferr'd, P. X. iv. 430 ; S. A. 

993. 
conference, P. X. v. 454. 
confefs, P. L. v. 329, 608, 818, 

viii. 523, x. 1088; P. R. iv. 

532 ; S. /A 448, 753, 829- 
contciVd, P. X.i. 509, x. 1100; 

P. P. i. 431; S.A. 1183, 

146'7. 
confeffing, P. L. x. 160. 
confide, P. L, xi. 235. 
confidence, P. X. vi. 343, 651, 

ix. 1056, 1175; P. It. ii. 

140; S.A. 1174; Cow. 583. 
conrident,_P. R. ii. 211. 
confine, P. X. ii. 977; £• ^- 

307 ; Od. Raj. 22. 
confin'd, P. /-. ii. 859, iii. 711, 

v. 78, x.368, xi. 341; P.P. 

i. 262; S. A. 9*, 501,006; 

Co;;/. 7- 
confines, P. X. ii. 395, vi. 273, 

x. 321. 
Confirm, P. X. i. 663; Pf. 

Ixxxiii. 30. 
confirm'd, P. X. ii. 353, ix. 830, 

xi. 71, 355. 
Gpnflagrant, P. X. xii. 518. 
conflict, p r £ iv. 995, vi. 212. 



conflicting, P. X. vL 24& 
conflux, P. P. iv. 62. 
conform'd, P. X. ii, 217. 
conformity, P. X. xi. 6'06. 
confound, P. X. ii. 136, 382, 

vi. 315, x. 665,908. 
confounded, P. X. i. 53, ii. 

996, vi. 871, ix. 1064, xii, 

455 ; P. P. iii. 2 ; Od. JVof. 

43, Pf. Ixxxiii. 63. 
confus'd, P. X. ii. 6l5, 952, vi. 

249; P. P. iii. 49; S. A. 

196, 1068. 
confuf dly, P. X. ii. 914. 
confufion, P. L. i. 220, ii. 372, 

897, 966, 996, iii. 710, vi. 

668, 669, 872, vii. 56, x. 472, 

xii. 62, 343j S. 4. 471, 1593; 

Pf. vi. 22. 
confuted, P.P. iii. 3. 
congeal'd, Cow. 449. 
conglob'd, P.L. vii. 239. 
conglobing, P. X. vii. 292. 
Congo, P. X. xi. 401. 
eongratulant, P. X. x. 458. 
congregated, P.L. vii. 308. 
congregation, P. L. v. 766. 
congregations, Pf. ii. 3. 
conje&ure, P. X. ii. 123, vj* 

545, viii. 76 , x. 1033; S. ^. 

1071. 
conjectures, P. R. iv. 292, 524. 
conjoined, S.A. 1666. 
conjugal, P. L. iv. 493, viii. 56, 

ix. 263; S.A. 739. 
conjunction, P.L. x. 898 ; P.R. 

iv. 3S5. 
conjur'd, P. X. ii. 693. 
connatural, P. X. x. 246, xi. 

529. 
connexion, P. L. x. 359» 
connive, 6'. A. 466. 
conniving, P. 7,. x. 624. 
connubial, P. X. iv. 713. 
conquer, P. P. i. 159, 222; 

Son. xvi. 10; Brwf. 14. 

conquer'd, P. L. xi. 797; P.P> 
iv. 134; S.A. 1207- • 



VERBAL INDEX. 



conajuerour, P. X. i. 143, 323, 

472, ii. 208, 338 ; P. R. ii. 

196, iii. 85 ; Son. viii. 10. 
Conquerours, P.L. xi.695 ; P.P. 

iii. 78, 99; S.A.2U. 
conqueft, P. X. iu 339, 543, vi. 

37; P.R. i,46, 154, ii. 422, 

iii. 72, 370, iv. 609 ; S. A. 

1206; P/.ii. 18. 
Conquering, P. X. iv. 391. 
confidence, P. X. iii. 195, iv. 

23, viii. 50=2, x. 842, 849, xii. 

297,522,529; P. -R.iv. 130; 

S. A. 1334 ; Son. xvi. 13, 

xxii. 10; Com. 212. 
confidences, Fore, of Con. 6. 
confeious, P. X* ii. 429, 801, 

vi. 521, ix. 1051, 
confecrated, P. R. i. 72 ; S. A. 

1354; Od.Nat. 189- 
confent, P. X. i. 640, ii. 24, v. 

121, 555; P. P. iii. 358; 

J/ Penf. 95 ; Com. 1007 ; Od. 

Sol. Muf. 6> 
confented, S. A. 846. 
xonfenting, P. R. ii. 130. 
confequence, P. X. viii. 328, x. 

364. 
tonfider, P. X. viii. 90 j P. P. 

i. 197, Hi. 231 5 S. A. 1348 ; 

Son. xix. 1. 
confider'd, P. I. ix. 84, 604 ; 

S. A. 245* 
confiderate, P. X. i. 603. 
confift, P. X. v. 793. 
confuted, 6'. A. 780. 
confidence, P.L. ii. 941. 
conlift, P. X. viii. 589, xi, 6l6. 
confifting, P. X. viii. 16. 
confiftory, P. R. i. 42. 
confifts, Com. 741* 
confolation, P. X. xi. 304, xii. 

620; P. P. i. 403;$.^. 183, 

664, 1757. 
confolations, P. X. xii. 495. 
confolatories, S. A. 657. 
confort, P. X. ii. 963, iv. 448, 

(?1Q, vii. 529, viii. 392, ix. 



954, xii. 526; P. R. I 51 5 

J/ Pew/ 145 ; Od. Nat. 132; 

Od £0/. Mm/. 27. 
conforted, P, X. vii. 50. 
confpicuous, P. X. ii. 258, iii. 

385, iv. 545, vi. 299, vii, 63, 

xi. 866; P>P. iv. 53. 
lefs confpicuous, P. X. x. 10!T« 
confpiracy, P. X. ii. 751, 
confpire, P/ Ixxxiii. 25. 
confpir'cl, P. X. xi. 426. 
confpiring, S. A. 892. 
conftancy, P. X. ix. 367; P, P» 

ii. 226; #. A. 1032. 
conflant, P. X. iii. 104, iv. 764, 

v. 552, 902, x. 882; P. P. u 

148; Com. 371. 
conftanteft, S. A. 848. 
Conftantine, Da/tfe I. 1, II. 5 2 

Ariofi. 4. 
conftellations, P. X. iii. 577, vi, 

312, vii. 562, viii. 512, x„ 

311; Od.Nat. 121. 
conftrain'd, P.X.ix.l64, 1066.; 

P.P. i. 331 ; S.A. 836, 1 198. 
conftraining, P. X. x. 568. 
conftrains, S. A. 1369, 1370. 
conftraint, P. X. ii. 972, x. 132 ; 

Xyc. 6. 
constraints, S. A. 1372. 
confult, P. X. i. 187, 798; v. 

768, 779; P.R. in, 12; Pf. 
.Ixxxiii. 17. 
confutation, P. X.-vi. 445. 
confultations, P. X. ii. 486. 
confulted, S. A. 1546. 
confulting, P. X. ii. 164, vL 

673, x. 456; P. P. i. 438, iv, 

577. 
confume, P. X. ii. 96, xi. 545, 

778 ; S. A. 575. 
confum'd, P. X, xi. 442; On 

Time, 10; Pf. lxxx. 65. 
confumes,P.X. v. 325 ; Pf vi. 14. 
confummate, P. X. v. 481, vii. 

502, viii. 556; P. R. i. 165. 
contagion, P. X. v. 880, x. 544; 

Xj/c. 127; Com. 467. 
d 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



contagious, P. L. ; x. 1036. 
contain, P. L. v. 314, 362, 409, 

vii. 12 , viii. 93, xii. 559. 
contain'd, P. L. viii. 473 ; S. A. 

1494. 
contains, P. JR. iii. 11. 
contemn, P. L. ix. 306 ; P. P. 

ii. 390, 448, iv. 490. 
contemn'd, P. £. vi. 432; P. JR. 

iv. 537 ; S. A. 943. 
contemning, P. P. iv. 304. 
contemns, P. L. x. \Q15\S.A. 

1281. 
contemplate, P. P. i. 386. 
contemplation, P. i. iv. 297, 

v. 511; P. P. iv. 214; II 
• Pe/?/. 54; Cow?. 377- 
contemplative, P. Ji. ii. 81 ; 

iv. 370. 
contempt, P. L. iv. 180, x. 763, 

1013, 1018; P. ii. iii. 131; 

& A. 7<i, 400, 494, 1342, 

1722. 
contemptible, S. A. 136l. 
contemptibly, P. £. viii. 374. 
contempts, P. P. iii. 191. 
contemptuous, P. L. iv. 885, 

v. 67 1; S.A. 1462; Cow. 

781. 
contend, P. L. i. 99, «• 529, 

687,iv. 851, vi. 16*9, x.958; 

i'^/. 123. 
contended, P. L. ix. 163. 
contending, P. L. ii. 203, xi. 

359, 72>. 
contends, P. P. iii. 443. 
content, I'. L. i. 399, v. 727, 

vi. 46l, xi. ISO, xii. 25; 

P. R. ii. 256, iii. 112, 170; 

S.A. L322, L39& 1403; Sen. 

x. 4, xxii. 1 L 
Contented, P. /,. iii. 701, vi. 

375, viii. 177- 
.contention, P. L. i. 100. 
contentment, P. L. viii. 366, x. 

973. 

contents, /\ /,. vi. 622. 
gonteft, P. L. iv. 872, vi. 124, 



ix. 1189, x. 756, xi. 80C; 

S.A. 461, 865. 
contiguous, P. L. vi. 828, vii. 

273. 
continent, P. L. ii. 587, iii. 

423, v. 422, vi. 474, x. 392. 
continual, P.L. ix. 814. 
continue, P. L. ii. 314, iv. 371 ; 

S. A. 592. 
continued, P. L. ii. 1029, iv. 

175, ix. 63. 138, xi. 744. 
continues, S. A. 588, 15l6. 
continued, P. L. v. 521. 
contracted, P. P. viii. 560 ; S. A. 

1062. 
contraction, P. X. vi. 597. 
contradid, P. P. iv. 158. 
contradicting, S. A. 301. 
contradiction, P. L. vi. 155, x. 

799 ; & ^. S9S ; E P- H° b f- 

II. 13. 
contraries, P. L. ix. 122. 
contrarious, S. A. 669. 
contrary, P.L. i. l6l, viii. 132, 

x. 506; P.P. i. 126, iv. 382; 

S. A. 1037. 
contribute, P. L. viii. 155. 
contrite, P. L. x. 1091, 1103, 

xi. 90 ; S. A. 502. 
contrition, P. -L. xi. 27. 
contrive, P. X. ii. 53; P/. 

lxxxiii.9^ 
contriv'd, P. L. v. 334. x. 1034, 

xi. 372. 
contriving, P. L. ii. 54, ix. 139- 
control 1, P. L. v. 803 ; Od. 2W. 

228. 
controversies, Hor. I. 3. 
controverfy, Cow. 409. 
contumacy, P. L. x. 1027. 
convenient, 5.//. 1471. 
converfant, P. P. i. 131. 
converfation, P. L. viii. 418; 

P. P. iv. 232. 
converfe, P. L. ii. 184, v. 230, 

vii. 9, viii. 252, 396, 408, ix. 

247, 909; P.R. i. 190, iv. 

229 ; Com. 459 ; Pf. ii. 24. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



convers'd, P. R. ii. 52. 
converting, P. X. iv. 639 > viii. 

432, x. 993. 
converfion, P. X. xi. 724; 

Xtonte I. 2. 
convert, P. L. v. 492. 
converts, S. A. 1564. 
convex, P. X. ii. 434, iii. 419, 

vii. 266. 
convey, P. X. xii. 75. 
conveyance, P. X. i. 707, viii. 

628, x. 249. 
convey'd, P. X. vi. 515, viii. 

156. 
con via, P. X. x. 83. 
conviction, P. X. x. 84, 831 ; 

P. R. iv. 308. 
convince, P. X. vi. 789* 
convinc'd, P. R. iii. 3; Co7W. 

792. 
convolv'd, P. X. vi. 328. 
convoy, Com. 81. 
convoy'd, P. X. vi. 752. 
convulfion, S. A. 1649. 
convulfions, P. X. xi. 483. 
cool, P. L. iv. 258, 329, v. 39, 

300, 396, 655, ix. 1109, x. 

95,847; P. P. iii. 221; S.A. 

546; Com. 2S2, 6? 8, 86l. 

more cool, P. X. v. 370, x. 95. 
cool'd, P. X. xi. 801. 
cooling, S. A. 625 ; Com. 186. 
copartner, P, X. ix, 821 ; P. P. 

1. 392. 
copartners, P. X. i. 265. 
cope, P. X. i. 345, iv. 992, vi. 

215 ; P. R. iv. 9. 
copious, P. X. iii. 413, v. 641, 

vii. 325; S.A. 1737* 
copfes, Lye. 42. 
coral, P. X. vii. 405. 
coral-paven, Com. 886. 
cordial, P. X. v. 12, viii. 466; 

Com. 672. 
cords, 6'. A. 26l ; P/. ii. 8. 
cormorant, P. X. iv. 196. 
corn, P. X. xii. 19 ; P. P. iii. 

259 ; L'Al. 108 ; Pf. iv. 36. 



corner, P. X. iv. 529 ; Com, 71 7. 
corners, P. X. x. 665* 
corner, P. X. i. 71 6. 
corny, P. X. vii. 321. 
coronet, P. X. iii. 640. 
corporal, P. X. v. 496, 573 ; 

P. R. iv. 299 ; 5. A. 616, 

1336; Com. 664. 
corporeal, P. X. iv. 585. 
corps, P. X. x. 601. 
corpulence, P. X. vii. 483. 
correct, Pf vi. 2. 
correfpond, P. X. vii. 511, ix, 

875. 
corrofive, P. X. ii. 401. 
corrupt, P. X. x. 695, 825, xi. 

784; S.A. 268. 
corrupted, P. X. i. 368, iii. 

162, xi. 57; S.A. 386. 
corrupting, P. X. xi. 889. 
corruption, P. X. iii. 249, x. 

833, xi. 428. 
corrupts, Od. D. F. I. 30. 
corfe, Od. D. F. I. 30. 
Corydon, UAL 83. 
cofen'd, Com. 737. 
coft, P. X. i. 414, iv. 271 i 

P. P. ii. 421, iii. 410; S.A. 

933. 
coftliefl, P. X. iv. 703. 
cotes, P. X. iv. 186; Com. 344. 
cottage, P. P. ii. 28, 287, 288; 

UAl. 81 ; Com. 320, 693. 
Cotytto, Com. 129. 
couch, P. X. i. 377, ii. 536, iv. 

601, ix. 1039, xi.490;P.P. 

ii. 282, iv. 585; Com. 276; 

Pf. vi. 12. 
couchant, P. X. iv. 406. 
couch'd, P. X. iv. 123, 351, 

876; P.P. i. 501, iv. 225. 
couches, P. X. iv. 405. 
covenant, P. X. xi. il6, 867, 

802, 898, xii. 252, 302, 346; 

0d.Cir.2\. 
covenants, Com. 632. 
cover, P. X. i. 659, ix. 1088 

1096, xi. 257; S.A.84>\. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



coverM, P. X. i. 763, v. 430, 
vi. 16, vii. 234, ix. 1058, 
1120, x. 223, xi. 217,749; 
P/. lxxx. 41. 

covering, P. X.i.312,ix, 1113; 
Com. 712. 

covers, P. X. ii. 267. 

covert, P. X. ii. 41, iii. 39, 
IT. 6>3, vi. 409, ix. 435 ; 
P..R. i. 305, ii. 262; flFenf. 
139; Com.9±5, 

covertures, P. L. x. 337, 

covet, P. X. ii. 35, x. 1020. 

coveting, P. X. ix. 923. 

could, P. X. i. 145,273, 575, 
628, 630, ii. 40, 113, 134, 
38 1 , 424, 449, 553, 566*, 76*9, 
876, iii. 98, 103, 106, 370, 
jv. 46, 85, 93, 127, 236, 
363, 79*, v. 86, 664, vi. 
137, 141, 192, 221, 612, 
659, 740, 788, vii. 37, 75, 
viii. 26, 109, 2/2, 483, 4£0, 
IX. 114, 115, 248, 307, $93, 
S33, 9*6, 1170, x. 15, 37, 
140, 36*5, 557, 953, xi. 29, 
308, 317, 396, 494, 495; 
1\ R.\. 137, 149, ii. 73,98, 
329,448, iii. 19, 126, 129, 
216, iv. 145,488; S. A. 48, 
127, 197, 447, 838, 881, 
1 524 ; Lye. 57, 5 8 ; LAI. 1 09 ; 
^rc.77;Cow. 194, 279,371, 
373, 573 ; Od. Not. 84, 108; 
Od. D. F. I 33 ; Ep. M. Win. 
6 ; Vac. Ex. 70 ; Ep. Hobf. 
II. 2. 

could'ft, P. X. iv. 950, v. 466, 

viii. 448, ix. 1149, *. 834; 

P. R. iii. 359; S. A. 543, 

D39; Com. 500; Son. xiii. 8. 

council, P. L. i. 755, ii. 506, 

\i.4l6, 507, x.428, xi.66l; 

P. R. ii. 118, iii. 235; Son. 

x. 2. 

council-table, CW. Nat. 10. 

counfel, P. X. i. 66*0, ii. 20, 



160, 304, 379, vi. 494, x, 
920,944, 1010; P. R. i;40, 
127, ii- 145, iii. 13; S. A. 
183, 497, 1251; Son. xvii. 
1 ; P/. i. 2, 
counfell'd, P. X. ii. 227, ix. 

1099. 
counfellers, S; A. 1653. 
counfels, P. X. i, 88, 168, 636, 

ii. 115, 125, 279, v. 681, 

785, vii. 610 ; Pf. v. 30, 

lxxxiii. 10. 
count, P. X. v. 833, viii. 319; 

P. R. ii. 248, 391, iii. 71 ; 

S. A. 250, 949, 991 ; Com. 

347; Hor. I. 1; i^." iii. 9. 
countenance, P. X. i, 526, ii. 

422, 756, iii, 385, 730, v. 

708,vi. 825, viii, 39, ix. 886, 

x. 713, xi f 317; S. A. 684; 

Com. 68 ; Pf. iv. 30. 
counterfeit, P. X. iv. 117, ix. 

1069; S. A. 189; II Pen/. 

80. 
counterfeited, P. X. v. 171. 
counterpoise, P. X. i. 1001. 
counterpoif'd, -S. ^. 770. 
counterview, P. X. x. 231. 
countries, Z 5 . P. iii. 73. 
country, P. X. iv. 235 ; P. P. 

iii. 102, 176, 366, iv. 355; 

S. A. 518, 851, 886, 889, 

891, 894, 980, 985, 99*, 

1213; LAI. 85; Com. l67, 

632. 
countrymen, S. A. 154-9. 
country's, S. A. 238, 884. 
counts, P. X. x. 91. 
couple, P. X. iv. 339. 
coupled, P. P. ii. 181. 
courage, P. X. i. 108, 279, 530, 

6*03, ii. 126, vi. 839, ix. 484; 
S. A. 524, 1381,1716; Com, 
6*10. 
courageous, P. X. iv. 920. 
courfe, P. X. i. 349, 786, ii, 
044, 980, iii, 573, 720, iV, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



164,224, 56l,66l,v.l73,655, 

86l, vi. 406, vii. 501, viii. 

126, 163, x. 211, 689, xi. 

794, 900, xii. 264; P. P. 

i. 252, iv. 445 ; S. A. 6J0 ; 

Com. 25, 159, 832; Ep. 

Hobf. 11. 30; Brut. 11 ; Pf. 

vii. 57, cxxxvi. 30. 
court, P. L. i. 792, ii. 300; 

Com. i. 962. 
courted, S. A. 719- 
courteous, Co?n. 275. 
courtefy, Com. l6l, 322. 
court-amours, P. L. iv. 7§7* 
courtly, Od. Nat. 243. 
courts, P. JC. i. 497, v. 650, vi. 

889; P.P. i- 488, ii. 183, 

iii. 237; Com. 325, 746; Orf. 

Nat. 13; CM. JEfor. 2; Pf. 

lxxxiv. 6, 33. 
coward, S. A. 347, 1237. 
cowering, P. i. viii. 350. 
cowls, P. L. iii. 490. 
cowflip, Od. May-M. 4. 
cowflips, Lye. 147. 
cowflip's, Com. 898. 
coy, P. L. iv. 310; Xyc. 18; 

Cam. 737. 
crab, P. L. x. 675. 
crabbed, Cow. 47 7« 
cradle, Vac. Ex. 46. 
craft, P. P. i. 432. 
craggy, P. L. ii. 289, iv. 547, 
cramm'd, P. i. x. 632. 
crams, Com. 779- 
crane, P. L. vii. 430. 
cranes, P. X. i. 576. 
cranks, UAL 27. 
crawls, Cow. 295. 
craze, P. L. xii. 210; S. A. 

571. 
cream-bowl, L'^/. 106. 
creams, P. L. v. 347. 
create, P. i. i. 652, ii. 19, 

260, 916, vii. 154, 188, 209, 

606, viii. 28, 558, ix. 146, 

911, x. 403, 890- t Com. 56l ; 

Pf cxxxvi. 18. 



created, P. L, i. 202, 573, ii. 
349, 623, 679, 832, iii. 89, 
100,112,278,391,679,705, 
iv. 43, 107, 999, v. 100, 373, 
414, 471, 511, 549, 838, 
894, vii. 64, 227, 232, 391, 
527, 529, 535, 607, 627, viii. 
623, ix. 147, 346, 557, 799, 
942, x. 618, xi. 58, 508, 605 ; 
P. R. ii. 324. 

creat'ft, P. L. vii. 616. 

creating, P. L. ix. 344. 

creation, P. L. ii. 36'5, iii. l63, 
383, 66l, v. 857, vi. 690, 
vii. 223, 449, 601, viii. 236, 
ix. 896, 946, x. 168, 852, 
xii. 472. 

creation-day, P. L. ix. 556. 

Creator, P. L. i. 31, 369, ii. 
385, iii. 167, 673, iv. 684, 
vii. 91, 259, 551, 567, viii. 
13,492,ix. 196, 938, x. 486, 
649, SS9 ; Od. Nat. 120. 

creature, P. L. iii. 151, 387, 
442, iv. 468, 5S2, 703, v. 
574, vii. 506, viii. 430, 470, 
ix. 84, 149, 897, x. 943; 
P. R. ii. 406. 

creatures, P. L. ii. 355, 498, 
834, iii. 230, iv. 2S7, 36'0, 
431, 616, 677, 790, v. 164, 
vii. 413, 455, 507, viii. 169, 
175, 264, 2/6, 370, 409, 41 i, 
546, ix. 112, 199,228, 612, 
940, x. 871, xi, 873; P.P. 
ii. 157, 325; S.A.672; Com. 
299; Od. D. F,I. 61 ; Od. 
Sol. Muf 21; Pf. cxxxvi. 85, 

credit, P. L. ix. 649; P. P. iv. 
12. 

credulous, P. L. ix. 644; P. P, 
ii. 166; Com. 697; Od. Hor. 
9- 

creek, P. L. vii. 399; P- R. ii. 
25. 

creep, P. L. ii. 656, v. 201 ; 
S. A. 75 i Lye. 115; L'Al. 
115. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



creeping, P. L. vii. 452, 523, 

ix. 180. 
creeps, P. L. ii. 950, iv. 259, 

vii. 475, 523. 
Cremona's, Od. Pafs. 26. 
crept, P. L. vii. 392, 484. 
crcfcent, P. L. i. 439, *. 434. 
creffets, P. X. i. 728. 
creft, P. L. iv. 988, vi. 188, 

191, ix. 525, 634. 
crefted, P. L. vii. 443, ix. 500; 

S.A. 141. 
creft-fallen, 5. ^. 1244. 
Crete, P. L. 514; P. JR. iv. 118. 
crew, P. £. i. 51, 477, 688, 

751, iv. 573, 952, v. 879, 

vi. 49, 277, 806, xi. 474, xii. 

38 ; P. R. i. 107, ii. 178, iv. 

577; S. A. 891; UAL 38; 

Com. 653, 805 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 

70. 
cricket, II Pen/. S2. 
cried, P. L. ii. 727, iii. 5}5 y 

vi.536, xi. 449; S. A.1639; 

Ep. Hob/. II. 26; Pf. iii. 

10. 
cried out, P.L. ii. 787. 
cried'ft, P.L. iv. 481. 
cries, P. L. i. 395, x. 859, 933, 

xi. 310; Son. xi. 5; P/ 

lxxxviii. 7- 
crime, P. L. i. 7.9, 606, iii. 215, 

290, v. 881, vi. 268, ix.971, 

1181, x. 127, 545, 841, xi. 

424, xii. 6 19; P. It iii. 212, 

213; S.A. 490, 842; Ep. 

llobf. II. 7- 
crimes, P. L. i. 214; P.P. iii. 

419. 
cringe, P. I. iv. 945. 
cring'd, P. /.. iv. 959. 
crifped, P. L. iv. 237; Com. 

984. 
crocodile, P. I>. \ii. 474. 
crocus, P. L. iv. 701. 
crofts, Com. 531. 
Cromwell, Son. \\i. l, 
Cronian, P. L. x. 290. 



crooked, P. X. x . 885 ; Vac. 

Ex. 69. 
crop, P. L. xii. 18; Ep. M. 

Win. 39. 
crop-full, UAL 113. 
crop, P. L. v. 6s. 
croft, P. X. ii. 290, xii. 413, 

415; Arc. 52; Od. Nat. 152; 

Ep. Hobf. II. 19. 
crofs'd, P. L. ix. 65, x. 39. 
crofs-barr'd, P. L. iv. 190. 
crofs-flowing, Com. 832. 
crofs-wind, P. L. iii. 437. 
croud, P. L. i. 380, 775, v. 

357, x. 538. 
crouded, P. X. x . 287. 
crow-toe, Lye. 143. 
crown, P. L. ii. 673, iv. 728; 

P.Pt.ii.458,iii.l69,iv.213; 

S.A. 1296, 1579; &*», 9, 

973 ;P/ vii. 60. 
crown'd, P.L. ii. 542, iii. 365, 

iv. 32, 262, v. 260, 445, 636 y 

839, vii. 194, 326, 380, ix. 

117, xi. 781 ; S. A. 175; 

Lye. 86; Cow. 934; Orf. Nat. 

47; Od. D.F.I. 54. P/iviii. 

16. 
crowned, Sow. xvi. 5. 
crowns, P. L. iii. 352, iv. 133: 

Cow. 26. 
crown'lr, P. L. v. 168. 
crucified, P. L. xii. 417. 
crude, P. L. ii. 941, vi. 4/8, 

511 ; P. P. ii. 349, iv, 328; 

S. A. 700; Lye. 3; Com. 

480. 
cruel, P. L. i. 604, ii. 501, vi. 

448, x. 782, 927, xi. 652 ; 

P.P. i. 149, iv. 139, v. 388; 

S. A. 642, 784, 1198; Com. 

679. 
cruelly, P. ft. i. 425. 
cruelties, P. L. Kiii. 494. 
cruelty, fir. yi. 616 ; £p. AT. 

Win. 29. 

qrumble, Com. 61 5. 
crumbled, P, I,, vii. 46"8c 



VERBAL INDEX, 



croft, P. L. x. 1035, xii. 430; 

Pf. cxiv. 17. 
cruih'd, P.L.vi.656; Com. 47. 
crufhes, P. L. v. 345. 
cry, P. L. ii. 514, 654, 795, 

iv. 2; S. A. 1524, 1553; 

Sow. xii. ll;P/*.iv. 18, vii. 3, 

Ixxxiii. 4, lxxxiv. 7, lxxxvi. 

18, Ixxxviii. 2, 53. 
cryftal, P. X. i. 742, iv. 263, 

v. 133, vi. 757, 860, vii. 293, 

xii. 197 ; P.P. i. 82, iv. 119; 

Com. 65, 673, 931 ; Od. Nat. 

125; Pf. cxiv. 14. 
cryftalline, P. L. iii. 482, vi. 

772, vii. 271 ; S. A. 546. 
Ctefiphon, P. P. iii. 292, 300. 
cube, P.L. vi. 552. 
cubick, P. £. vi. 399. 
cubit, P. X. xi. 730. 
cuckoos, Son. xii. 4. 
cuckoo's, Son. i. 6. 
cuirafs, S. A. 132. 
cuiraffiers, P. R. iii. 328. 
cull, Fac. Ex. 21. 
cull'd, Cow. 630. 
culling, Com. 255. 
culminate, P. L. iii. 6 17. 
cumber'd, Com. 730, 
cumberfome, P. il. iii. 400. 
eumbrance, P. P. ii. 454. 
cumbrous, P. jL. i. 428, iii. 

715, xi. 549, xii. 1£1. 
cunning, P. R. i. 145, iv. 11 ; 

HAL 141. 
cunningly, S. A. 819. 
cup, P.P. ii. 386; £.^.934; 

Com, 51, 525. 
Cupid, Com. 445. 
cups, P.L. v. 444, xi. 718; 

P.P. iv. 119; Lye. 150. 
curb, P. L. ii. 3^2, 531, iv. 

859, xi. 643; Cow. 825 ; Od. 

D. F. I. 73. 
cure, P. L. ii. 145, 146, 46p, 

ix. 776, x. 1079; S.^. 630, 

912; Com. 811,913. 
£Uifew ? II Pen/. 74 j Com. 435* 



curiofiry, 5. ^. 775. 

curious, P. L. iv. 242 ; P. R. i. 

319, 333, iv. 42; Cow. 714. 
Curius, P. R. ii. 446. 
curl, Arc. 46. 

curl'd, P.L. ix. 517, x. 560. 
curls, P. -L. iii. 641, iv. 307; 

Com. 608. 
current, P. i. iv. 227, v. 808, 

vii. 67; S.A.547; Com. 740. 
currents, P. -L. xi. 853. 
curfe, P. L. ii. 374, 622, x. 

174, 640, 729, 734, 822, 

1053, xii. 99, 103. 
curfed, P. L. i. 389, ii. 1055, 

vi.650, 806, ix.904, x. 201, 

818,852, 984, xii. 406 ; Com. 

609, 653, 939. 
curfes, P. L. x. 732 ; Lye. 101. 
curft, P.L. iv.7l. 
curtain'd, Od. Nat. 230. 
Cufco, P. L. xi. 408. 
cuftody, P. L. ii. 333, 946 ; 

S. A. 802. 
cuftom, P. L. i. 640, xi. 810. 
cuftora'd, P. L. v. 3. 
cut, P. -L. vi. 325, ix. 1110; 

P ? P. iii. 269 ; Pf. lxxx. 66, 

Ixxxiii. 13, Ixxxviii. 66. 
cut off, P. L. iii. 47 ; S. A. 

75±, 1157; P/ Ixxxiii. 39. 
cuts off, P. £. x. 1043. 
Cybele, Arc. 21. 
Cyclades, P. L. v. 264, 
cycle, P. X. viii. 84, 
Cyllene, Arc. 98. 
cymbals, Od. Nat. 208. 
Cynick, Com, 708. 
Cynofure, L'AL 80 ; Cow. 342. 
Cynthia, II Penf 5Q. 
Cynthia's, Od. Nat. 103. 
cyprefs, Cow. 521. 
cyprefs-bud, Ep. M. Win. 22* 
Cyprus lawn, II Penf. 35. 
Cyrene's, P. L. ii. 904. 
Cyriack. Son. xxii. 1. 
Cyrus, P. P. iii. 33, 284, 
Cytherea's, P. £. ix, J9» 



VERBAL INDEX. 



daffodillies, Lye. 150. 

daffodils, Com. 851, 

Dagon, P. X. i. 462 ; S. A. 13, 

437, 440, 450, 46l, 468, 478, 

861,1145,1151,1311,1360, 

1370, 1463. 
daily, P. X. iv. 6l8, viii. 1^3, 

601, ix. 548, 565; P. R. iv. 

142; S.A. 6,76, 114,919, 

1261; Lye. 129; Cow. 314, 

635 5 P/'. lxxxvi. 9. 
daintieft, Fizc. Ex. 14. 
dainty, Com. 680. 
dairy, P.L. ix. 541. 
daifies, X',4/. 75 ; Com. 120. 
dale, P. X. i. 410, ii. 944, iv. 

243, 538, vi. 641, viii. 262; 

P.P. iii. 267; L'AL 68; 

Com. 496; Od. JVatf. 184; 

Od. May-M. 8 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 

23. 
dales, P. L. viii. 275, x. 860 ; 

P. P. iii. 318. 
Dalilah, P. X. ix. 106l ; S. A. 

229, 724, 1072. 
dalliance, P. L. ii. 819, iv, 338, 

ix. 443, 1016. 
dally, Lye. 153. 
dam, Com. 498. 
Damcetas, Lye. 36. 
damage, P. X. vii. 152. 
Damaico, P. X. i. 584. 
Damafcus, P. X. i. 468. 
damafk'd, P. X. iv. 334. 
dame, P. L. ix. 6l2 ; Com, 130. 
dames, L'Al. 52 ; Cow. 347. 
Damiata, P. X. ii. 593. 
damnation, P.L. i. 215. 
damm'd up, Com. 336. 
damn'cl, P. L. ii. 482, 496,597, 

iv. 392; P.P. iv. 194; Com. 

57 1 , 602. 
damned, Of/. AW. 228- 
damp, P. I/, i. 523, v. 65, ix. 

45, x. 283, xi. 293, 544; 

& A< 8 ; Com. 470, 6*40. 



damps, P. X. x. 848 ; P. H. iv, 

406. 
damfel, S. A. 721 ; Com. l5S t 

829; Od.D.F.I.9. 
damfels, P. X. i. 448 ; P. P. ii. 

359. 
Dan, P. X. i. 485 ; P. P. iii. 

431 ; S. A. 332, 976 , 1436. 
Danaw, P. X. i. 353. 
dance, P. X. i. 786, ii. 664, iii. 

580, iv. 267, 768, v. 178, 

619, 620, 630, vi. 615, vii. 

324, viii. 125, 243, xi. 584, 

619J15 ; Arc, 96 :Com. 104, 

176,883,952,974; Od.Nat. 

210; Pf. lxxxvii. 25. 
dane'd, P. X. v. 395, vii. 374, 

ix. 103 ; Lye. 34; Vac. Ex. 

60. 
dancers, S. A. 1325. 
dances, Com. 673. 
dancing, S. A. 543 ; L'Al. 96; 

Od. Mav-M. 2. 
dandled, P. X. iv. 344. 
danger, P. X. i. 636, ii. 421, 

449, 1008, iii. 635, iv. 934, 

v. 239, vi. 418, ix. 267, 349, 

864,1157, 1172, 1176; P. P. 

i.94; S.A. 529; Com. 370, 

401. 
dangerous, P. X. ii. 107, 342, 

vi. 698 ; P. R. iv. 455. 

more dangerous, P. X.x. 382, 
danger's, S. A. 1522. 
dangers, P. X. i. 275, ii. 444, 

vii. 27; P. P. ii. 460, iv. 479 i 

Od.PaJf. 11. 
Daniel, P. R. ii. 278, 329. 
Danite, P. J,, ix. 1059. 
dank, P.L. vii. 441, ix. 179; 

Com. 891 ; Son. xx. 2 ; Od. 

Hor. 15. 
Dante, Son, xiii. 12. 
Danubius, P. P. iv. 79. 
Daphne, P. X. iv. 273; P.R< 

ii. 187; Com. 66 1. 
dapper, Cow. 118. 
dappled, L'Al 44. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



dare, P. L. iii. 523, iv. 942, ix. 

304; P. it. iv. 6l0; S.A. 

1254; Com. 427; Od. Nat. 

225 ; Fore, of Con. 5. 

dar'd, P. L. ix. 922 ; P. P. iv. 

172. 
dares, P. P. iii. 57 ; Arc. 23 ; 

Com. 780. 
dar'ft, P.P. ii. 682, vi. 182; 

P.P. iv. 178; S.A. 1394. 
Darien, P. P. ix. 81. 
daring, P. P. vi. 129, ix, 305, 

xi. 703; S.A, 531, 16*28, 
dark, P. L. i. 22, 213, 456, ii. 
58, 264, 405, 464, 486, 588, 
6lS, 718, 823, 891, 916, 953, 
960, 1027, iii. 11, 20, 45, 
188, 380, 424, 498, 544, 6l 1, 
iv. 609, 899, v. 208, vi. 380, 
415,478, 482, 870, vii. 212, 
viii. 478, ix. 90, 162, x. 283, 
371, 438, 457, 594, 667, xi. 
478,743, 809; P.P. i. 41, 
194, 434, iii. 318, iv. 456 ; 
5.^.2,75,81, 86,154,591; 
Lye. 101 ; L'Al, 10 ; Com. 
197, 3S3, 500 ; Son. xix. 2 ; 
Od. Nat. 123, 219; Od.PaJf. 
7 ; Od. D. F. I. 30 ; Vac. Ex. 
71 ; Pf. vi. 14, lxxxviii. 52. 
too dark, Od, Pafs. 33. 
dark, dark, dark, S. A. 80, 
dark'd, Com. 730. 
darken, P. L. vi. 57 '. 
darkened, P. L. i. 343, 599, "• 

491, ix. 1054. 
darkeft, II Pen/. 33, 
darkens, P. L. i. 501. 
darker, P. P, ii. 720, v, 646, 
darkifh, Com. 631. 
darkling, P. P. iii. 39- 
darknefs, P.L. i. 63, 72, 391, 
659, ii. 220, 263, 266, 269, 
377, 754, 958, 984, iii. 16, 
256, 421, 539, 712, iv. 665, 
v. 179, 614, vi. 6, 10, 11, 
142, 407, 715, 739, vii. 27, 
233, 250, 251, 255 } 352, ix, 



64, x.383, 394,745, xi. 204 s 
xii. 187,188,207,271,473; 
P.P. iv. 397,441; S.A. 99, 
159, 593 ; L'Al 6, 50 ; Com, 
J 32, 194, 204, 252, 278, 335 ; 
Ep. M. Win. 10 ; Pf. lxxxii, 

18, Ixxxvi. 48, lxxxviii. 27, 
49 72. 
darkfome, P. L. ii. 973, iv. 232, 

v. 225, xii. 185 ; Od.Nat. 14. 
dark-veil'd, Com. 129. 
darling, P. L. ii. 373, 870. 
dart, P. L. ii. 672, 702, 729, 

786,854, xi. 491,658. 
darted, P. P. ix. 1036. 
darts, P. L. i. 568, vi. 213, viii. 

62, xii. 492, 536 ; P. P. iv. 

366, 424. 
Darwen, Son. xvi. 7. 
dafh, P. X. ii, 114, vi. 488, x. 

577; P. P. iv. 149, 559i 

S. A. 1240. 
dahYd, P.R. iv. 19; Com. 451; 

P/. vi. 21. 
date, P. P. xii. 549 ; P. P. iv. 

392; Com. 362; Pp. #o£/ 

II. 29. 
daughter, P. L. ii. 817, 870, iv. 

660, ix. 291, 653, x. 353, 

384, 708; P.P. iii. 342; 

S.A. 221; L'Al. 23 ; II Penf. 

25; Com. 51, 241,827,922; 

Son. x. 1 ; Ep. M. Win. 3. 
daughters, P. L. i. 453, iii.463, 

iv. 324, ix. 1105; P. P. ii. 

154, 180; S.A. 875, 1192; 

Arc. 69 ; Com. 837, 982. 
David, P. X. xii. 326, 347; 

P. P. iii. 358, 383, 408. 
David's, P. P. xii. 357 ; P. P. 

i. 240, iii. 153, 169, 282, 

357, 373, 405, iv. 105, 147, 

379,470. 
daunt, II Penf. 137 ; Son. xv. 4. 
dauntlefs, P. P. i. 603, ix. 694 ; 

Com. 650. 
dawn, P.L. ii. 1037, iii. 24, 

545, v. 167, vi. 492, vii. 374, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ix. 192, 412 ;L'^/. U;Od. 
Nat. 86. 
dawning, P. L. iii. 500, iv. 588, 

vi. 528, 749, xii. 421, 423. 
day, P. L. i. 50, 339, "• 178, 
505, 734, iii. 42, 198, 392, 
725, iv. 449, 564, 613, 680, 
712, 725, v. 33, 162, 168, 
170, 229, 313, 558, 582, vi. 
8,423, 424, vii. 98, 202, 251, 
341, 350, 371, viii. 24, 136, 
137, 206, 329, ix. 51, 59, 
136, x. 53, 99> 275, 278, 
681, 854, xi. 178, 550, 826, 
898, xii. 242, 264, 539; 
P.R. i. 317, iv. 221, 400; 
S. A. 82, 404, 807, 1297, 
1299; Com. 95, 382, 978; 
Son. i. 5, xx. 4, xxi. 13, 
xxii. 1, xxiii. 14 ; Od. Nat. 
13, 78, 140, 167 ; Od. Pafs. 
33; Pf. i. 6, lxxxi. 11, 
lxxxvi. 21. 
all day, P. L. ix. 220 ; Com. 

688 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 2, 6/. 
all day long, P. L. iv. 616. 
all the day, Pf. lxxxviii. 39- 
all the day long, Pf. cxxxvi. 

30. 
by day, P. L. v. 53, vii. 347, 

viii. 143, ix.209, xii. 203, 

257 ; Com. 569. 
day by day, P. L. viii. 31. 
every day, Pf vii. 44. 
fifth day, P. L. vii. 448. 
firftday, P.L. vii. 252. 
fourth day, P. L. vii. 386. 
his day, P. L. xii. 277- 
in the day, P. L. vii. 544, ix. 

705, 762. 
on a day, P. L. v. 579, « • $75. 
one day, P. R. i. 189; S. A. 

79\, 10H);P/:ixxxiv. 33. 
fecond day, P. L. vii. 275. 
felf-fame day, P. L. vi, 87. 
feventh day, P. L. vii. 592. 
unci' the day, P. /,. ix. 1039- 
fix th day, P.L. vii. 501, 550. 



fummer's day, P. L. i. 44& 

744. 
that day, P. L. v. 6l 2, 6l8, 
662, vi. 246, vii. 593 y 605, 
viii. 229, 331, ix. 201, x. 
49, 210, 1050, xi. 212, 
272, xii. 447; S. A. 265. 
third day, P. L. v. 603, vi. 

170, 539. 
this day, P. L. v. 603, vi. 
170, 539, 544, 802, ix. 968, 
1021, 1102, x. 125, 773, 
811; P. R. i. 130; S. A. 
12, 145, 434, 1216, 1388, 
1574, 1600 ; Od.Cir.26; 
Pf ii. 16. 
to-day, Son. xxi. 5. 
day-labour, P. L. v. 232 ; Son. 

xix. 7. 
day-light, P. P. iv. 398 ; L'Al. 

99 ; Com. 126. 
day-fpring, P. L. v. 139, ▼*• 

521; S.A. 11. 
day-ftar, Lj/c. 168. 
day's, P. L. x. 962, 964, xi. 
204, 765 ; I/Pe/?/. 141 ; Od. 
May-M. 1. 
dayVjourney, P. X. v. 2S4. 
dayV\vork, P. X. vi. 809, ix. 

224, xi. 177. 
days, P. L. ii. 222, 695, iii. 
337, 581, v. 618, vi. 424, 
502, 684, 685, 699y 871, vii. 
25, 26, 342, 568, 601, viii. 
69 y ix. 137, x. 178, 202, 
576, 680, 1037, xi. 39, 114, 
198, 254, 357, 600, 689, 782, 
xii. 22, 188, 347, 465, 602 ; 
P. R. i. 183, 303,309, 352, 
353, ii. 11,12,243,245,276, 
315, iii. 234,276, 412; S.A. 
191, 702, 762, 1062, 1064, 
I0S9, 1741 ; Lye. 72; Son. 
vii. 3, x. 9, xix. 2 ; Ep. M. 
Win. 11 ; Vac. Ex. 72; Pf 
vi. 11, lxxxi. 54, lxxxi v. 36. 
dazzle, P. L. iii. 381, ix. 1083. 
dazzled, P. L. viii. 457- 



VERBAL INDEX. 



dazzles, P. L. v. 357- 
dazzling, P. L. i. 564, iv. 798 ; 

Com. 154, 791. 
dead, P. L. iii. 233, 327, 477, 

xii. 190, 460,461; P.R. ii. 
77',S.A. 79, 143,984,1570; 

iyc. 166 ; Com. S79 ; Otf. D. 

F.I. 29; Otf. So/. Mm/14; 

P/. vii. 16, lxxxviii. 18, 38, 
41. 

not dead, P. L. ix. 870. 
deadlier, P.L. xii. 391. 
deadlieft, P. R. iv. 622 ; 5. A. 

1262. 
deadly, P. L. ii. 577, 712, 811, 

iii. 221, iv. 99, ix. 932, xi. 

446; S. A. 19, 623; Com. 

567; Od.Nat.6. 
deaf, #. A. 249, 960. 
deafening, P. L. ii. 520. 
deal, P.X. vi. 125, xi. 676, xii. 

483 ; Com. 683. 
dealing, S. A. 1529. 
deals, P. L. iv. 70. 
dealt, P. L. iv. 68, xfi. 484 ; 

S. A. 283, 707. 
dear, P.L. ii. 817, 818, iii. 2l6, 

276, 297, 403, 531, iv. 101, 

222, 486, 756, v. 673, vi. 

419, viii. 580, ix. 228, 289, 

832, 965, 970, x. 238, 330, 

349; S. A. 894; Lye. 6, 173 ; 

Com. 453, 564, 790, 864, 879, 

902 ; Ep. W. Sk. 5 ; Pf. ii. 5, 

v. 17, Ixxxi. 47, lxxxiv. 2, 

32, lxxxv. 32, 33. 
dear-bought, P. L. x. 742. 
dearer, P. L. iv. 412, v. 95. 
deareft, P. L. iii. 226, viii. 426, 

Lye. 107 ; Od. Paff. 10. 
dearly, P. L. iii. 300, iv. 87, ix. 

909 ; S. A. 933. 
dearly-bought, S. A. 1660. 
dearly-loved, Od. D. F. I. 24. 
dearth, P. L. viii. 322, xii. l6l ; 

Pf. viii. 22. 
death,P.L.i.3,555,ii.621,622, 

624, 787, 789, 804, 840, 845, 



854, 1024, iii. 212, 223, 241, 
245, 252, 259, 299, iv. 197, 
221, 425, 427, 518, vii. 545, 
547, ix. 12, 283, 685, 695, 
702,714,760,767,775,792, 
827,830,901,953,954,969, 
977,9^,989,993,1167, x. 
49,210,230,234,251,269, 
278, 294, 304, 407, 473, 490, 
588,591,635,709,731,774, 
788,797,798,809,815,852, 
854,858,962,981,989,1001, 
1004,1008,1020, 1024, 1028, 
1037, 1050, xi. 36, 40, 6l, 
157,168,197,252,268,462, 
466, 468, 491, 529, 537, 547, 
601, 676, 709, xii. 398, 406, 
412, 420, 424, 425, 428, 431, 
433, 445, 494, 571 ; P. R. i. 
159, 264, iii. 85, 87, 98, iv. 
305, 388 ; S. A. 104, 138, 
288,485, 5 13, 575,650, 1 198, 
1232,1263,1513,1572,1579, 
1666, 1724; Com. 562, 608, 
Son. xiv. 4, xix. 3, xxiii. 4; 
Od. Puff. 20; Od. Cir. 18; 
Od. on Time, 22 ; Ep. M. Win. 
10; Ep.Hobf. I. 1, 6, 9, II. 
11, 26; Pf. vi. 9, vii. 48. 

deathful, S. A. 1513. 

deathlefs, P. L. x. 775, 798 ; 
Com. 973. 

death-like, P. L. xii. 434. 

death's, P. £. iii. 252, ix. 13, 
xi. 258, 676, xii. 392; S.A. 
630, 1581 ; Pf lxxxviii. 11, 
24. 

deaths, P. L. ix. 832. 

debar, P.L. ix. 236. 

debafe, S. A. 999. 

debas'd, P. L. ix. 487, xi. 510 ; 
S. A. 37, 1335. 

debate, P.L. ii. 42,390, v. 681, 
vi. 122, ix. 87; P.R. i. 98 ; 

" S A. 363. 

debates, Pf. Ixxxii. 4. 

debel, P. R. W.605. 

debonair, L'Al. 24. 



verbal Index. 



debt, P. I. iii. 246, iv. 52 ; 

S. A. 313, 509. 
Decan, P. L. ix. 1103. 
decay, Ep. Hobf. II. 5 ; P/. 

lxxxvi. 4. 
decay'd, P. £. xi. 843. 
deceas'd, Pf. lxxxviii. 42. 
deceit, P. £* v. 243, ix. 772, 

x. 1035. 
deceitful, S. A. 202, 537- 
deceivable, S. A. 350* 942. 
deceive, P. L. ii. 189, 46l, iv. 

124, x, 6 ; P. it* ii. 142 ; 

S.A. 750; Sow. vii. 5. 
deceiv'd, P. L. i. 35, iii. 130, 

ix. 404, 998, x. 496", 56*4, 

917, 990, xi 783 ; P* R. i. 

52; S.A. 211 ; Cam. 221. 
deceiver, Cow. 696. 
deceiving, Od. Nat. 175. 
decencies, P. L. viii. 601. 
decent, P. L. iii. 644 ; IlPevf. 

30. 
deception, P. L. ix. 362, 
decide, P. L. vi, 303; -S. ^. 

1175. 
decides, /for. IIL 1. 
decifion, P. L. ii. 908* 
deck, P. L. v. 189; Cow?. 717- 
deck'd, P.L. iv.710,v.379,vii. 

478 ; Com. 120 ; Vac. Ex. 26. 
declare, P. L. v. 158, 603, vi. 

677, viii. 603, x. 462; P. R. 

i. 445, iv. 337 ; P/. ". 14, 

lxxx. 18. 
declar'd, P. L. iv. 300, v. 765, 

vii. 181, ix. 6ll, 658, x. 401, 

xi. 350, 720 ; P f R. i. 305, 

ii. 4, iii. 119, iv. 521. 
declares, P. L. iv. 619, 746; 

P. ii. ii. 252; Od. Hor. 14. 
deciar'ft, P. L. vi. 728. 
declaring, PL. ix. 968. 
decline, P. L. iv. 792, v. 370, 

xii. 97- 
declin'd, P.L. iv. 353, x. 99 ; 

s. a. m. 

decree, P«L. ii. 198, iii. 115, 



126, 6S9 t v. 602, 674, 717, 
774, 814, vi. 683, x. 43, 68* 
772, xi.47, 96, 311; S.A, 
85 ; Pf. ii. 13. 

decreed, P.L. ii. 160, iii. Il6> 
172, ix. 151 % P. P. Hi. 186, 
188. 

decrees, P. L. v. 884, x. 644, 
953 ; P. R. i. 55. 

decrepit, P. L. x. 655 ; S.A. 69. 

Dee, Fflc. Ex. 98. 

deed, P. L. v. 66, 549, vi. 237, 
ix. 921, x, 142, xi. 461, iii, 
103; S.A. 826, 1267; Lye. 
83 ; Son. viii. 3. 

deeds, P.L. i. 130, ii. 116, 484, 
549, 722, 739, iii. 292, 337, 
454, iv. 26, 394, 990, v. 113, 
865, vi. 66 , 112, 170, 240, 
283, 354, x. 354, xi. 256, 
428, 659, 796, xii. 161,322, 
582; P.R. i. 14, 215, 233, 
386, ii. 139,438, iii. 16,91; 
S.A.otf, 248,276,369, 372, 
638,875,893,898,972,1043, 
1513 ; Son: ix. 10; Soph. 1, 2, 

deem, P. L. vi, 429, viii. 599* 
xii. 534; P. R. iii. 150, iv. 44, 

deem'd, P. L. ii. 46, 748, iii". 
469, vii. 152, ix. 129, 683, 
xii. 567; P.P. i. 23; S.A. 
1705. 

deeming, P. L. i. 205. 

deep, P. L. i. 28, 126, 152, 177, 
314, 601, ii. 12, 79,87,131, 
167, 262, 267, 302, 344, 382, 
392,421, 431, 578, 591,634, 
.773, 829, 891, 934, 961,994, 
11 i. 11, 5S6,629,707 iv.76, 
99, 123, 574, 674, v. 6 14, 
666, 872, vi. 326, 356, 478, 
482, 554, 652, 71 6, 862, 898, 
vii. 52, 103, 134, 166, 168, 
216, 245,289,303,413, ix. 
83, 602, x. 245, 299, 301, 
A7\,677y 844, xi. 417, 489, 
749,826,848, xii. 578; P. R. 
i. 90, 108, 190, 36l, iii. 227, 



VEftBAL INDEX. 



S91, iv. 327, 417, 631 ; Lye, 
50; Com. 23, 523, 733, 1000; 
Son. xxi. 5 ; Od. Nat. 123, 
156 ; Od. Cir. 9 ; Vac. Ex. 33 ; 
Ep. W, Sh. 12 ; Brut, 2 ; Pf 
ii. 4, vii. 55, lxxx. 38, lxxxi. 
29, lxxxii. 11, lxxxiii. 10, 
Ixxxviii. 20. 

too deep, P. L. vi. 869, S.A, 
1568, 
deep-throated, P. X. vi. 586. 
deep-vaulted, P. R. i. 11 6. 
deeper* P. X. in. 201, x. 844, 

xii. 432. 
deepeft, P. X. iii. 678, v. 542 ; 
Vac. Ex. 22 ; Pf. lxxxvi. 48. 
deeps, Pf. Ixxxviii. 28. 
defae'd, P, X. ix. 901, xi. 522. 
defamM,^.^. 977. 
defaming, P. L. iv. 746. 
default, P. L. ix. 1145; S. J. 

45. 
defeat, P. X. i. 135, vi. 138. 
defeated, P.L. vi. 606, xi. 254* 

P.R, i.6; S,^. 1571. 
defeating, P. X. xii. 431. 
defeats, S. A. 1278. 
defed, P.L. x. 891. 
defective, P. X. viii. 425. 
defeds, P. X. viii. 419. 
defence, P. X. ii. 362, v. 731, 
vi. 337, 467, ix. 325 ; S. A. 
560, 1286; Com. 42, 489; 
Son. xxii. 11 ; Pf, vii. 40. 
without defence, P. X. iii, 
166. 
defencelefs, P. X. x. 815 ; Cow?. 

414 ; Son, viii. 2. 
defend, P. X. ii. 1000, vii. 37, 
xi. 657, xii. 483 ;<S.^. 1179; 
Com, 396 ; Pf lxxxii. 14. 
defended, P. X. xi. 86 .; S, A, 

285. 
defend'ft, Pf. v. 35. 
defends, P. X. xii. 207 ; P. R. 

ii. 370. 
defeniive, P, X, vi. 393 ; 5, A, 
1038. 



defer, P. X.ix. 586; S.A, 4*?4 f 

1557* 
defiance, P. X. i. 49, ii. 697, iv. 

873, xii. 74; £. A, 1073 5 

F«c. £#< 44. 
deficience, P. X. viii. 416. 
deficient, P. X. ix. 345. 
defied, P. X. L 765,vi. 130, 357* 
defies, Si A. 1222. 
defile, S. A. 1368. 
defilement, Com. 466. 
deflowerd, P. X. ix. 901, 
deform, P. X. ii. 706, xi. 494, 
deform'd, P. JR. iii. 86 ; S. A. 

699- 
deformed, P. X. vi. 387. 
deformities, P, X. xi. 513 ; Orf. 

Nat. 4>4>. 
defy, P.X. i. 49; S,^. 1175. 
degenerate, P. X. xi. 806 ; P. JR.- 

iv. 144; Com, 475. 
degenerately, S. A. 419- 
degrade, P. X. iii. 304 ; S, A. 

687. 
degraded, P. X. viii. 552, xi, 
501; P. JR. iv, 312; Com. 
475. 
degree, P, X. v. 490, 707, viii. 
176,417, ix. 599, 883,934; 
S.A, 414, 1607. 
degrees, P. X. iii. 502, v. 473, 
591,750,792, 838, vii. 157, 
x. 669 ; Com. 462. 
dejed, P.R. ii. 219; & ^ 

213; P/.vi.3. 
dejeded, S. A. 338. 
dejection, P. X. xi. 301» 
deified, P. X. viii. 431. 
deify, P.X, i. 112. 
deign, P. X. vii. 84, 569^ xii. 
281; P.R. ii. 336; &*£• 
1226; IlPenf. 56. 
deign'd, P. X. v. 221, 365, viii. 

202. 
deigns, P. X. v. 59, ix. 21. 
deities, P. X. i. 273, ii- 11, vi. 
157; P. ii. iii. 410, iv.340; 
Com. 29. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Deity, P. L. iii. 187, v. 724, 
806, vi. 682, 750, vii. 142, 
ix. 167, 885, x. 65, xi. 149, 
xii. 15; S. A. 465, 899; 
Arc. 25,93; Od. D.F. I. 10; 
Vac. Ex. 35 ; Pf. vii. 63. 

delay, P. L. ii. 60, iii. 635, iv. 
103, 311, vii. 101, ix. 675, 
xii. 223, 615 ; P. R. i. 56. 
no delay, S. A. 1344. 
without delay, P.L. x. 163; 
S. ^. 1395. 

delay'd, P. L. v. 247, ix. 844, 
xi. 492 ; Com. 494. 

delays, P. L. i. 208, x. 771 ; 
P. P. ii. 95. 

delegable, P. L. v. (529- vii. 
539. 

Delia's, P. L. ix. 387, 388. 

deliberate, P. L. i. 554. 

deliberation, P. L. ii. 303. 

delicacies, P. L. viii. 526; P. P. 
ii. 390. 

delicacy, P. L. v. 333 ; Com. 
681. 

delicious, P. X. ii. 400, iv. 132, 
251, 422, 729, v. 635, vii. 
537, ix. 1028, x. 746 ;£. A. 
541 ; Com. 704. 
more delicious, P. L. xi. 439- 

delicioufly, P. L. vii. 491. 

delight, P. L. i. 11, 160, ii. 247, 
iii. 168, 664, 704, iv. 106, 
155, 206, 286, 497, 894, v. 
19, 400, vi. 727, vii. 330, viii. 
11,384,391,477,524,576, 
580, ix. 114, 242, 243, 419, 
449, 454, 468, 7S7, x. 272, 
941, xi. 533, 596, xii. 245 ; 
P.R. i. 208, 481, ii. t92, 
373, 480, iii. 54, iv. 263, 
345; & A, 71, 633, 1490, 
1642; UAL 91 ; Com. 262, 
812, 967; Son. xxiii. 12; 
Vac. Ex. 20; Pf. 1. 5, v. 
10. 

delighted, P. L. v. 545, 627, 
vii, 571, viii. 49, ix. 398. 



delightful, P. L. i. 467, iv, 4S7 f 

643, 652, 692, ix. 1023. 
delightfully, P. £. x. 730. 
delights, P. X. iv. 367, 435, v. 

431, viii. 600 ; S. A. 916; 

Lye. 72; UAL 151; Cow. 

846 ; Son. xx. 13. 
delineate, P. L. v. 572. 
deliver, P. L. iv. 368, ix. 9$9 ; 

P. R. iii. 380, 404; S. A. 

deliverance, P. L. ii. 465, iii. 

182, vi. 468, xii. 235, 600; 

P.R. ii. 35, iii. 374; S. A. 

225,246,291, 603. 
delivered, S. A. 437, 1184 ; Ep. 

Hobf. II. 33 ; P/ lxxxi. 24, 

lxxxviii. 23. 
deliver'd up, S. A. 1158. 
deliverer, P. L. vi. 451, xii. 

479; S. A. 40, 274, 279, 

1214, 1270, 1290. 

great Deliverer, P. L. xii. 
149. 
Deliverers, P. R. iii. 82. 
delivery, S. A, 1505, 1575. 
dell, Cow?. 312. 
Delos, P. X. v. 265, x. 296. 
Delphian, P.L. i. 517. 
Delphick, Ep. W. Sh. 12. 
Delphos, P. R. i. 458; 0<f. 

JVta. 178. 
delv'd, Pf. vii. 55. 
delude, P. L. x. 557, xi. 125. 
deluded, S. A. 396. 
deluding, P. P. i. 435; Ii 

Penf. 1. 
deluge, P. L. i. 68, 354, xi. 

843. 
delufion, P. P. iv. 319. 
delufions, P. P. i. 443. 
delufive, P. L. ix. 639. 

more delufive, P. iv. x. 563. 
demand, Pf. lxxxi. 44. 
demands, Pf. Ixxxii. 16. 
demeanour, P. J-. iv. 129, 871, 

viii. 59, xi. l62. 
deiuociatick, P.P. iv. 269. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Demodociis, Vac. Ex. 48. 
"Demogorgon, P. L. ii. 9^^- 
demoniack, P. L. xi. 485 ; P. R. 

iv. 628. 
demonian, P. R. ii. 122. 
demons,, 11 Pen/. 93. 
demur, P. L. ii. 431, ix. 55S1 
demure, & y/. 1036' ; It Pen/. 32. 
demurring, P. ii. i. 373. 
den, P.L. i. 199, ii- 58, iv. 342, 

vii. 45S, xi. 185; P. R. i. 

116; Cum, 399- 
denial, Li/cl 18. 
clcnied, P. L. iv, 137, ix: 240, 

555, 76'7; Lj/c. 159; Son. 

xix. 7. 
denies, P. L. xii. 173. 
denounce* P. L. xi. 106. 
tlenounc'd, P. L. ii; 10$ ix. 
. 6'95, x. 49, 210, 853, 962 ', 

S. d.96s. 
denouncing; P: L\ xi. 815; 
dens, P.L. ii. 621 , ix. US. 
denfe, P. L.ii.498. 
deny, P: L. v. 107; 5. -4. 881; 

Cum. 559; Vac. Ex. 15. 
depart, P. Li vi. 40* viii. 632, 

xi. 356, xii. 1Q2, 557; Pf- vi. 

16*, 17. 
departed, P. L. iv. 839; 
departing, P. L. x. 430, xi. 315, 
departs, P. L. xii. *55l 
departure, P. L. xi. 303. 
depend, P.L. xii. 504; Vac. 

Ex.83. 
dependant, P; P. ix. 043* 
depending, P. P. iv. 312. 
depends, P. P. x. 400'. 
deplore, P. L. viii; 479* &'c. 

100.. 
deplored, P. L. xi 939. 
depopulation, P.L. xi. 7 06. 
deport, P. P. ix. 3S9, xi. 666. 
depof d, P. P. i. 413. 
depofited, S. A. 429- 
depravM, P. L. v. 471, x. 825, 

xi:806, 880'; S, A. 1042. 
JepratTt, P. P. vi. 174. 

to' I- 1. 



deprecation, P. I«. viii. 378; 
deprefs'd, P. P. ix. 46 ; S. A> 

1698. 
deprive, P. P. iii. 23. 
deprived, P. P. ix. 857, xi. 3 iff. 
deprives, P. P. xii. 100. 
depth, P. L: i. 549, 627, ii. 

324, viii; 413; P.P. i. 13. 
derided, P. P. vi. 6'33, xi. 817- 
derides; P. L. ii. 191, ix. 211 % 

L'Al.Sl. 
derifion, Pi L; v. 7o6 r vi. 608, 

xii. 52; S. A: 366. 
derive, P. P. xi. 427, xii. 36. 
derivit, P. R. ii; 418. 
deriv'd, P. P: ix. 83/, x. 77; 

965; P.R. i. 289, iv, 338. 
defart, P. L. ii. 270, 973, iii. 

544, vii. 314, viii. 154, 

x. 437, xi. 719\ xii. 139, 

216; P.R. i. 9, 193, 296, 

501, ii. lOQ, 240, 271, 4l6; 

iii: 166, 264, iv. 46*5; Lye. 

39; L'AL 10; Com. 269, 

387; Pfi Ixxxiii. 24: 
deicant, P. L. iv. 6'03 ; S; A. 

1228, 
deicend, P. X. vii. 1, S4, viii. 

198, ix; 16*9, x. 337, 394, 

39S, 648, xii: 588, 606 ; 

P. R. i. 83, ii. 213; S: A. 

30*1; 
ddcended, P. P. iv. 54i, x. 90, 

xi; 75, 576, xii. 607, 6'28 ; 

P. P. i. 31, 282, ii. 110, iv, 

273;llPaij:22;0<LD.F.I. 

19. 
ddcending, P. JL. i. 327, iii. 

303, 511, v. 36*3, vi. 325, 

xi. 3, 670,- xii. 228; S. A. 

635. 
dtTcends, P. L. v. 399, vii. 

513, xi; 142. 207, 80*2, xii. 

48, 
deicent, P. L. ii. 14, 76, iii. 

20, ix. 16*3, X1979, xi. 127, 

xii. 20*9; & .4. lfl; Pu<. 

31. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



defcents, P. X. viii. 410. 
defcribe, P. X. viii. 3$, ix. 33. 
defcrib'd, P. X. iv. 067. 
defcribing, P. P. iv. 26*6. 
defcried, P. X. ii. 6*36', ix. 60, 

x. 325. 
defcries, P. X. iii. 501. 
defcry, P. X. i. 290, vi. 530, 

viii. 149, ix. 228; P.P. ii. 

280; .S. A. 1301; Arc. 3. 

Cotm. 141. 
delen, (verb) P. X. v. 515; 

S. , . 275. 
deferred, P. X. iv. 922, ix. 980, 

xi. 655; P.P. ii.3l6. 
delertion, S.A.632. 
deierts, (verb) P. L. viii. 563 ; 

S. ... 8.8, 205. 
deferve, P.X. i. 692; P. P. iv. 

16'9; 5.-4.489, 116*9, 136*6. 
deferv'd, P. X. iv. 42, vi. 354, 

709, x. 16, 726'; P. P. iii. 

106. 
dH"ervcd, Od. D. F. L'G9. 
defervedly, P. P. i. 407, »v. 133. 
deferves, P. L. vi. 467 ; Eurip. 3. 
deserving, P. L. v. 446, xi. 17 1 ; 

P. P. iii. 77; S.-4.493. 
defervings, P. L. x. 72/. 
defign, P. L. i. 6*46', ii. 38rj, 

630, iii. 46'7, iv. 524, v. 33, 

ix.26l; P. P. ii. 103. 
defign'd, P, X. ii. 838, x. 60, 

277; S. A. 32,801. 
defining, P. X. ii. 179- 
defigns, P. L. i. 213, v. 2-27, 

737; P.P. ii. 410. 
defmible, P. X. viii. 505; S. A. 

358. 
defire, P. L. ii. 295, iii. 662, 

6*94, iv. 466, 509, 523, v. 45, 

555, vi. 201, vii. 6*1, 119, 

viii. 62, 252. 417, 451, 526", 

ix. 584, 592, 741, 1013, 

1186, x. 995, 9973 P. P- 

i. 382, ii- 16"(), 211; S. A. 

541, 980, 16*77; Od. May-M. 

6". Pf. vii. 24. 



defired, P. X. ix. 398, 

defires, P. X. iii. 177, iv. 808, 

v. 518, xii. 8*7; P. P. ii. 46*7- 
defir'ft, P. L. x. 837, 948. 
defiring, P. X. viii. 6*28. 
defirous, P. X. v. 631, ix. 839, 

x. 749, 947; 5.-4.741. 
dcfift, P. P. iv. 497 ;S.A. 9$9> 
defining, P. X. vii. 552. 
defolate, P. X. iv. 936, viii. 

154. x. 420, 864, xi. 306; 

Pf. lxxxii. 13. 
defolation, P. X. i. 180, 5. A. 

156*1 ; Cow. 428. 
defpair, P.X. i. 126, 191,525, 

ii. 6, 45, 126, 143, iv. 23, 

74, 115, 156, vi.78?,x. 113, 

1007, xi. 13.9, 301, 489; 

P. P. i. 485; 5. A< 631, 

1171. 
defpair'd, P. L. i. 660, vi. 495. 
defpairing, P. X. ix. 255. 
defperate, P. X. ii. 107, iii, 85; 

P.P. iv. 23. 
defperation, P. P. iv. 579- 
defpicable, P. X. i. 437, xi. 

340. 
defpife, P. X. vi. 717, ix. 878; 

P. P. iii. 28 ; 5. A. 272. 
defpifd, P. X. ii. 481, v. 60, 

vi. 812, vii. 422; P. P. ii. 

218; 5. A. 16*88; Com. 724. 

more defpifd, P. X. vi. 6*02. 
defpite, P. X. vi. 340,906, jx. 

176, x. 1044, xii. 34; P. It. 

iv. 446"; P/' exxxvi. 41. 
defpiteful, P.L. x. 1. 
defpoil, 5. .4. 469. 
defpoil'd, P. X. iii. 109, ix. 

411, 1138; P. P. iii. 139; 

5. 4. 539. 
defpotick, S. A. 1054. 
deltin'd, P. L. i. 16*8, ii. l6l, 

848, vii. 6*22, x. 62, 646, xi. 

387, xii. 233; P. P. i. 65; 

i'\9; 5. J. 634; />//c 20. 

deftiny, P. X. iv. 58, v. 534; 

£>. /My: 11. 3. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



deftitute, P. L. ix. 1062 ; P. P. 

ii. 305. 
deltroy, P. L. ii. 502, 734, 787, 

iii. pi, vi. 226, 855, vii. 607, 

ix. 477, 939, x. 611, 1006, 

xi. 892; S.A. 1587; Pf- v. 

15. 
deitroy'd, P. LA\. 85, 92, iii. 

301, ix. 130, xi. 76l, 875, 

xii.3, 262; S.^. 856, 1587. 
deftroyer, P. L. iv. 749; 5. A. 

985, 1678. 
deitroyers, P. L. vii. 697. 
deftroying, P. L. ix. 129, 478, 

xii. 394. 
deftroys, P. L. iii. 301, x. 838 ; 

P. P. ii.372. 
deftru&ion, P. L. i. 137, ii- 84, 

464, 505, iii. 208, v. 907, 

vi. 162, 253, viii. 236, ix. 

56, 134, x. 612, 1006; P. R. 

i. 376, iii. 202 ; S. A. 764, 

1514, 1658, 1680. 
detain, P. L. viii. 207, x. 367. 
detain <1, P. L. iii. 14, 227- 
detains, P. L, x. 108. 
detect., P. L. x. 136. 
deter, P. R. ii. 449. 
deterr'd, P. L. ix. 6*99. 
determine, P. L. vi. 318, xi. 

227. 
determin'd, P. £. ii. 330, v. 
879, ix- 148; P. R. ii. 291. 
determin'it, S. A. 843. 
deteft, P./: v. 16. 
deteitahle, P. L, ii. 745. 
detraction, ^?c. 11. 
detractions, Son. xvi. 2. 
detriment, P. L. vii. 153, x. 

409. 
Dcva, Lye. 55. 
Deucalion, P. L. xi. 12. 
device, P. .ft. iv. 443; Com, 

941. 
device?, ZV. lxxxi. 52. 
Devil, P, L. ii. 496, iii. 613, 
iv. 502, 846, ix. 1§8, X. 
878 : P. P. iv. 129. 



devilim, P. Z. if. 379, iv. 17, 
394, 801, vi. 504, 553, 589; 
P. P, i. 181. 
devils, P. L. i. 373. 
devious, P. L. iii. 489. 
devife, P. L. vi. 504, viii. 207, 

ix. 1091 ; Com. 963. 
devifd, P. L. ii. 379, v. 780. 
deviling, P. L. iv. 197. 
devoid, P. L. ii. 151. 
devolved, P. L. x. 135. 
devote, P. L. iii. 208, ix. 901, 

xi. 821. 
devoted, P. L. v. 890 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 60. 
devotion, P. i. vii. 514, xi. 
452; S. A. 1147; Arc. 35. 
devour, P. L. ii. 435, 805, ix. 
77, x. 606; P/. exxxvi. 53. 
devour'd, P. L. x. 712, 980 ; 

P. R. iv. 573. 
devouring, P. L. v. 893 xii. 

183; Vac. Ex. 86. 
devours, P. _L. xii. 184; JCj/c. 

129; Ocl. on Time, 4. 
devout, P. L. xi. 14, 863 ; // 
Pen/. 31 ; 0«*. Sol. Muf. 15; 
P/C Ixxxviii. 6. 
dew, P. L. iv. 614, 645, 653; 
P.R.i.306;S.A.72S;L'AL 
22; UPenf. 172; ^rc. 50 ; 
CW. 352, 802, 996; Ep. M. 
Win. 43. 
dew- befp rent, Com. 542. 
dew-drops, P. L. v. 746. 
dew'cl, P. L. xii. 373. 
dews, P. L. i. 771, v . 212, 429, 
646, xi. 135; P.R. iv. 406; 
Eye. 29. 
dewy, P. £. i, 743, v. 56, 141, 

vii. 333, ix. 1044, xi. 865. 
dewy-feathered, 7/ Ptnf. 146* 
dextrous, P. L. v. 741. 
dextroufly, P. X. xi. 884. 
diaholick, P. L. ix. 95. 
diadem, P. L. iv. 90. 
dialed, P. L. v. 76I. 
diamond, P. L. iii. 506, ;.y, 
« 2 



VERBAL INDEX; 



554, v. 634, J59, vi. 364; 
Com. 881. 

diamonds, Com. 732. 

Dian, Com. 441. 

Diana's, P.P. ii. 355. 

diapafori, Od. Sol. Muf. 23. 

dictate, P. L. xi. 355 ; Com. 767. 

dictates, P. P. ix. 23; P. P. i. 
482. 

dictator, P. P. i. 113. 

Didean, P. P. x. 584. 

did, P.R. ii.452, iii. 53; S. A. 
36*1, 382, 543, 781, 75)3, 
1187, 11S>1> 1210; Lye. (»'(), 
108; II Pen/. 115; Cow. 
221, 223, 249, 266, 56'3, 
624; Son. xii. 1 ; Od. Nat. 
5, 75, 92, 94; Od. Paf. 2, 
4; Or/. D.F.I. 6; Vac. Ex. 
6l ; JEfl. #06/ II. 1; I xxxv. 
7, lxxxvii. 12, 46', 47; Od. 
5o/.Mtff.l9;P/.lxxxi.25,27, 
49, exxxvi. 1 7, 2 1 , 53 , 57, 69. 

didt't, P. P. i. 7, 86, iii. 10, 
393, 401, v. 120, 886, 888, 
vi. 40, vii. 9, 10, ix. IO67, 
1155, 1158, 1159, x. 145, 
148, 376, 758, 762, xi. 253, 
754; P. R. iv. 467, 605 i 
S. A. 421, 689, 883, 895; 
Son. xiv. 3; Od. D. /'. /. 
42, 44, 59, 64 ; Vac. Ex. 2, 
62 ; Pf. iv. 4. vii. 23, Ixxx. 
37, lxxxi. 26, lxxxiii. 36, 
lxxxv. 5, 10. 

die, V V iii. 209, 210, 240, 
216, 295, 409, iv. 527, vi- 
347, viii 330, ix. ()().), 685, 
713,763, 9^7, 928, 979, x. 
783,788,792, 1005, xi.459, 
471, xii- 1 7 5 K 507 ; S. ./. 32, 
1706'; Od. Nat. 137 ; /•>. 
//•. Sh. \6) Ep. Hob/. II. 2; 
If. Ixxxii. 23, 21, lxxxiii. 
6'3 t Ixxxii 5. 

died, P. P. xii. 428,445; /'. R. 
ill. 422; 8. .1. 287, 1579 i 
*j>. iio^- H« 16', 22. 



dies, P. L. i.i. 624, iii. 542, ix., 

764, x. 790, xii. 163, 419;' 

Lye. J 42. 
dicft, P. L. vii. 544. 
diet, P. L. v. 495 ; II Pen/. 46. 
dieted, P. P. ix. 803. 
difference, P. P. iii. 15. 
different; P. P. i. 636, viii. 130, 

471, ix. 883, xi. 3S2, 574; 

Com. 145. 

far different, P.P. iii. 89. 
differing. P. L: v. 490, vii. 71. 
difficult, P. L. ii. 71, x. 593, 

.992 ; P. P. i. 298, ii. 428, 

iv. 157. 
difficulty, P. L. Vi. 449, 102 1 , 

1022, x. 252. 
diffidence, S. A. 45*. 
diffident, P.L. viii. 562, "ix^o. 
diffufe, P. L. vii. 190. 
diffufd, P.L. iii. 137, 639, iv. 

818, vii. 265, ix. 852; P. Ii. 

i. 499, ii. 351 ; S. A. 96, 

1.18, 1141. 
digeft, P. P. v. 412. 
digefiion, P. P. v. 4. 
digg'd, P. 7>. i. 690, vi. 51 6. 
dight, //J/. 62; II Pen/. ]^9. 
dignified, P. P. ix. 940; 5'. .V 

6.82. 
dignities, P. L. 1. 359; P. P. 

iii. 30. 
dignity, P. L. ii. 25, 111, iv. 

('1.9, v. 827, viii. 489, x. 151. 
digreffions, P. P. viii. 55. 
dilate*], /'. L. i. 429, iv. 986, 

\i 486, ix. 876. 
diligence, P. R. ii. 387 ; .S. A. 

924. 
dim, P. /,. i. 597, ii. 75.°,, 1036, 

in. 26, v. 0S5, ix. 707, 876V 

x. 23; Lye. L05 ; // Pen/. 

160 ; (Vv///. 5, 2/8; 0*/ f jYV. 

198; /'/: Kxwui. 38. 
dimenfiou, P, P. vii. 480. 

without dimenhon, P. L. ii. 

dimenfionkft, /'. P. xi. 17. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



*imenhons, P. X. i. 79^. 
idiminifh, P.L. vii. 6l2. 
diminifh'd, P. X. iv. 35. 
diminution, P. X. vii. 369;, 

S. A. 303. 
dimly, P. X. v. 157. 
dimm'd, P. X. iv. 114, xi. 212. 
dimple, XVi/. 30. 

dimpled, Com. llf). 

din, P. L. i. 668, ii. 1040, vi. 
408, x. 521, xii. 6l ; UAL 
49 ; Or/. Sol. Kluf. 20. 

dingle, Co/n. 312. 

dinner, P. X. v. 304, 396'; 
UAL 84. 

dint, P. X. ii. 813. 

dips, Com. 803. 

dipfas, P.L. x, 526. 

•dipt, P. X. v. 283, xi. 244. 

dire, P. X. i. 94, 134, 189, 
624, 625, ii. 128, 589, 628, 
820, iv. 15, vi. 211, 248, 
665, 7b6, vii. 42, ix. 643, x. 
524, 513, xi. 248, 4/4,489, 
xii. 175; P. R. iv. 431 ; 
vS. ,4. 626, 1544, 16*66; Com. 
207, 517. 

dire- looking, Arc, 52. 

sirred, P. L. i. 34S, ii. 980, 
iii. 6l 8, 631, iv.795, v. 301, 
508, vi. 719, vii. 293, 5/6, 
ix. 216, 974, xi. 190, 7U, 
xii. 639 ; P. R. i. 096 ; Coin. 
807. 

ilire^t againft, P. X. iii. 526. . 

directed, P. X. ii. 981, v. 49, 
vii. 514- P.P. i. 247. 

di redly, P. X. iii. 89 ; S. A. 
1250. 

directs, P. P. i.119, iv. 393. 

dirt, Ep. Bob/. I. 2. 

Dis, P. X. iv. 2/0. 

difabled, P.L. xii. 392; S. A. 
1219. 

di fad vantage, P. X. vi. 431. 

difagrce, P. X. ii. 497. 

difallied, S. A. 1022. 

difappear, V. R. iv, 397» 



difappear'd, P. X. vi. 41 4, viii. 

4/8, xii. 640 ; P. P. i. 498. 
difapprove, S. A. 970. 
difapproves, Son. xxi. 12. 
difarm'd, P. X. iii. '253, vi. 

490, ix. 465, x. 945 ; S. A, 

540. 
difarray'd, P. X. iii. 396. 
difaftrous, P. X. i. 597. 
difband, P. X. ii. 523. 
di (burden, P. X. ix. fj24 x. 

719- 
difburden'd, P. X. vi. 878. 
difburdening, P.L. V.0I9. 
difcern, P. X. i. 326, iii. 682, 

iv. 867, ix. 544,681; P.P. 

i. 348 r iv. 390 ; 5. A. 1305; 

Ep. M. Win. 22. 
difcern'd, P. X. iii. 407, iv. 

570, v. 299, ix. 573, 1149, 

x. 331; P.P. iv. 497. 
difeerning, P. X. xii. 372. 
difcerns, P. X. i. 78, v. 71 1, 

ix. 765. 
difcharge, P. X. vi. 56 i, xi. 

196; S.A. 1573. 
difcharg'd, P.L. iv. 57 ; P/ 

lxxxviii. 17. 
difciples, P. X. xii. 438. 
difcipline, P. X. iv. 944. 
difciplin'd, P. X. xii. 302. 
difclofe, P. X. vi. 445, viii. 

607. 
diiclofd, P. X. vi. 86l, vii. 

419. 
difcomfit, S. A. 469. 
difcompofd, P. X. v. 10, x. 

110. 
difconfolate, P. X. xi. 113. 
difcontented, P. X. iv. 807. 
difcontinuous, P. X. vi. 329,, 
difcord, P. X. ii. 967, vi. 210, 

897, vii. 217, ix. 1124, x. 

707. 
difcover, P. L. i. 64, 724, ii. 

5/1, xii. 290 ; P.P. iii. 85, 

iv. 3. 
difcover'd, P. X. iv. $14, vi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



571, x. 10, xi. 267; S.A. 

998. 
difcovering, P. L. v. 142. 
difcovers, P. L. iii. 547. 
difcountenance, P. R. ii. 218. 
difcountenanc'd, P. L. viii. 553, 

x. 110. 
difcourfc, P. L. ii. 555, v. 233, 

395, 48S, S03, viii. 48, 211, 

552, ix. 5, 223, x. 343. 
difcourfd, P. R. i. 479- 
difcourtcfy, Com. 281. 
difcreet, P. R. ii. 157. 
difcreeteir, P. L. viii. 550. 
difcurfive, P. L. v. 488. 
difdain, P. L. i. 98, iv. 82, 

770, v. 666, ix. 534; P. R. 

i. 406, 492, iv. 170 ; S.A. 

1106. 
difdain'd, P. L. iv. 180, vi.367, 

x. 213, 876. 
difdainful, P. L. ii. 680. 
difdainfully, P. L. iv. 903. 
difdaining, P. L. vi. 798 ; P. 21. 

i. 448. 
difcafe, S.A. 618, 698; Ep. 

Hub/: 11. 21. 

difcas'd, P. L. xi. 480. 
difeafes, P. L. xi. 474; S. ^. 

699- 

difencumbcr'd, P. L. v. 700. 
difenthrall, Pf. iv. 4. 
difenthrone, P. L. ii. 229- 
difefpous'd, P.L. ix. 17. 
disfigurM, P.L. iv. 127. 
disfigurement, Co//?. 74. 
disfiguring, P. L. xi. 521. 
difglorified, S.A. 442. 
difgorge, P. 7,. i. 575. 
difgorging, P.L. \i.588, xii. 

158. 
difguife, P.L. x.$3l;Arc.26; 

Com. 571 ; Od. Pa If. 19. 
difguis'd, p. /,. i. 481, iii. 480, 

IX. 522, x. 330; Com. 6 15. 
difguifes, P. L. iv.740. 
djfhearten'd, P. /,. v. 122; 

P. ILu 26'8; f. //. 563. 



dimes, P. il. ii. 341 ; Vac. Ex, 

14. 
difhevell'd, P. L. iv. 306. 
diflioneft, P.L. iv. 313; Son. 

x. 6. 
dilhonour, P. L. ix. 267, 297, 

330; S. A. 452, 86l, 1385; 

Pf. vii. 18. 
diflionourable, P. L. iv. 314 

5. A. 1424. 
difhonour'd, 6'. ^4. 563. 
dishonours, S. A. 1232. 
difmherit, Com. 334. 
disinherited, P. L. x. 821. 
disjoin, P. L. iii. 415, ix. 884. 
disjoining, P. J,, v. 106. 
diilike, P. L. i. 102, viii. 443, 

xi. 720. 
diflodge, P. L. v. 669, vi. 7- 
diflodg'd, P.L. vi. 415. 
diflodging, P. L. iii. 433. 
difloyal, P.L. iii. 204, ix. 7, 
difmal, P. L, i. 60, ii. 572, 823, 

vi. 212, 666, viii. 241, ix. 

185, x. 508, 787, xi. 469 ; 

P. R. i. 101, iv. 452 ; S. A. 

1519; Or/. JVVtf. 210; Fr/c. 

£*. 68 5 Pf. Ixxxviii. 14. 
difmay, P. L. i. 57, ii. 422, ix, 

917, xi. 156; P. R. i. 108, 

iv. 579- 
difinay'd, P. L. ii. 792, iv. 86l, 

x. 35 , xi.449; P. it. i. 268$ 

S. A. 1060. 
difmifs, P.L. vii. 108, viii. 564, 

ix. 1159, xi, 113. 
difmifs'd, P. L. x. 410, xi. 507, 

xii. 195; P. R. ii. 199 i 

S.A. 1757. 
difmifling, P. L. ii. 282. 
di fin ill ion, S. A. 688. 
difraounted, P. L. vii. 19. 
difobedience, WL. i. 1, v. 541, 

888, vi. 35)6, yn, ix. 8; 

P. R. 1. 2. 
difobedient, P. L. vi. 687, Jfi 

?6l. 
difobey'd, P. L. \i. 403. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



difobeying, P. L. iii. 203. 
difobeys, P.L. v. 611, 6l2. 
diforder, P L. iii. ?13, vi.388. 
di (order d, P. L. vi. 696*, x. 911. 
diibrdinate, 5. -4. 701. 
difparage, P. L. i. 473 ; S. A. 

1130. 
difparity, P. L. viii. 386. 
diiparted, P.L. vii. 241, x.4l6. 
difpatch, P. L. v. 436, ix. 203 ; 

P/: lxxxii. 10. 
difpatch'd, S. A. 1599 5 Com. 42. 
diipatchi'ul, P.L. v. 331. 
difpell'd, P. L. i. 530. 
diipcls, P.L. v. 208. 
difpenfation, 5. ^. 6l. 
difpenfe, P. i. iv. 157; 5.-4. 

314, 1377- 
difpens'd, P. L. v. 330, 571, xi. 

776; Com. 772. 
difpenfes, P. L. iii. 492, 579. 
dispeopled, P. L. vii. 151. 
difperi'e, P. L. iii. 54, v. 208 ; 

Pf. ii. 20. 
difpers'd, P. L. iv. 26 1, v. 7, 

651, x. 578, xii. 45; P.P. 

iii'. 376. 
difplace, P. L. i. 4/3. 
dif'plac'd, Cam. 56'0. 
difplays, Son. xv. 7. 
difplay'd, P. L. ii. 10, vii. 390, 

ix. 1012 ; // Pen/. 149 ; 'Od. 

Nat. 114. 
difplaying, P. P. i. 67. 
difpleafe, S. A. 1373. 
difplcas'd, P. L. viii. 398, ix. 

535, x. 22, 944, xii. 63 ; 

S. A. 1084. 
dii'pleafure, P. L. ix. 993 , x. 

952, 1094; 5. ^. 733; P/. 

vi. 2. 
diiplode, P. L.vi. 605. 
difport, P. L. ix. 520, 1042. 
diiporting, P.L. viii. 518. 
difpofal, S. A. 210, 506. 
difpofe, P. L. i. 246, viii. 170, 

xi. 54; P.R. ii. 400, iii. 

369 ; S. A. 1382, 1746. 



difpos'd, P. L. iii. 115, v. 646, 

xii. 349 ; P. P. iv. 56. 
difpofer, P. L. iv. 635; P.R. 

i. 393. 
difpofition, S. A. 373. 
difpoffefs, P. L. iv. 961, xii. 28. 
d.ifpoffefe'd, P. L. vii. 142. 
difpraifo, P.L. vi..3S2, xi. l66. 
difprais'd, P.R. iii. 56. 
difproportions, P. L. viii. 27» 
diiputant, P.P. iv. 218. 
difpute, P. L. v. 822, viii. 55, 

158; S.A. 1395. 
difputes, P. L. vi. 123, viii. 77 9 

x. 828. 
difrelifli, P. L. v. 305, x. Z69. 
difled, P. L. ix. 29. 
dilfcmble, Com. 805. 
diflembled, P. P. i. 467. 
diffembler, P. L. iii. 681. 
diffenfion, P. L. xii. 353. 
diflent, P. L. v. 679, vi. 146, 

ix. Il60. 
dififevering, Com. 817. 
diffimulation, P. P. i. 498. 
dilTipation, P. L. vi. 598. 
diffolve, P. L. iv. 955, viii. 291, 

xi. S83, xii. 546; P. R. ii. 

165; It Pen/. 165. 
dilfblV'd, P. L. ii. 506, iii. 457 ; 

P. R. ii.436; 5.^f. 729. 
diflblves, 5. J. 177. 
dilFolutOj P. L. xi. 803; S.^f. 

702. 
ditfoluteft, P. P. ii. 150. 
diliblution, P. L. ii. 127, iii. 

458, x. 1049, xi. 55, 552, 

xii. 459. 
diflbnance, P. L. vii. 32. 
diffonant, 5'. A. 662. 
diffuade, P. L. ii. 122, ix. 293. 
diiifuades,'P. L. ii. 188. 
diitance, P. L. iii. 578, vii. 379, 

viii. 21, 113, ix. 9, x. 247, 

683; S.A. 954,, 1550. 
diftances, P. L. iv. 945. 
diftaat, P. L. iii. 428, 50 , 566, 

6*21, iv. 453, vi, $30, 551. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

vii. 87, x. 362, 6J3; P.Pt.ii. 230, 381, 570, vi. 251, x. 

353, iv. 454. 836, xii. 157, 199. 

diltaiU-, P. L. ix. 0. divides, P. L. iii. 419, vi. 70 5 

diltempcr, P. L. vii. 273, ix. ' P. R. i. 401. 

887, xi. 53. dividing, P. L. vii. 269; Orf. 

diitemper'd, P. L. iv. 807, ix. Fat. 50. 

1131, xi. 56'. dividual, P. L. vii. 382, xii. 85. 

diftempere, P. L. iv. 118. divine, P. L. i. 683, ii. 99, iii. 

diftended, P. L. xi. 880. 44, 141, 225, 384, 411, iv. 

diftends, P. L. i. 572. 291, 36'4, v. 67, 159, 256, 

jji'ftil, Od. Cir. 7. 278,458,546,625,734, 806, 

diftili'd, P.L. v. 56; Cow. 556. vi. 101, 158, 184, 780, vii. 2, 

diftintf, P. L. vi. 846, 847, vii. 72, 195, viii. 6; 215, 295, 

536, ix. 812 ; S.>4. 1595. 314, 436, ix. 606, 776, 845, 

dilti notion, P. L. v. 590. 865, 899, 986, 993, x, 139, 

diftinguilh, P.L. v. 892 ; Com. 857, 85S, xi. 319, 354,' 512, 

149. 606, xii. 9 ; P. It. i. 35, 14 1 y 

jliftihguifhable, P. L. ii. 66S. iv. 588 ; S. A. 44, 210, 422, 

dirtorted, P. L. ii. 784. 526, 1683 ; II Pcvf. 100 ; 

diftraclt, P.L. iv. 18; S. A. Arc. 4, 30; Cow. 245, 469, 

1 55i). 475, 630 ; Od. ±Xat 177; Or/. 

dinrachd, P. P. i. 108 ; S. A. D. P.P 35 ; Ode on June, 15 ; 

1286, Od. Sol. MuJ\3', Pf. lxxx, 

diitrei's, P. L. x. 920, 942, xii. 13, 29, 58, 77. 

613 ; S.A. 1330; fy lxxxii. divin'd, P. L. x. 357. 

11, lxxxvi. 21. divinely, P. L. vi, 761, viii. 

dit'treCt, Com. 905. 500, ix. 489, X. 67 ;' P. P. i. 

diftruft, P. P. ix. 6, xi. l66j 26, iv. 357 ; £ v .^. 226'. 

P.P. i. 355, iii. 193. divinely warbled, Od. Nat. 96, 

dtfturb, (fubft.) P. L. vi. 549. divineft, 11 Pcnf. 12. 

u;f!mb,(v(Tb.)P.L.i.l67,ii.l02, divinity, P. L. ixVlOlO. 

97 1 , vi. 225 ; ix. 262 ; Lijc. 7. diyifible, P. L. vi, 33 1 . 

niliurbance, P. 7>. ii. 3]3. diurnal, P. P. iv. 594, vii. 22, 

difturbances, P. P. x. 8O7. viii, 22, 134, x. 1069. 

difturb'd, P. l>- ii. 6.37, iv. 879, divulge, P. L. viii. 73; S. A. 

994, v. 226, vi. 266, ix. 192, 124 S. 

. 918; P, Ii. iv. 409; ^ivulg'd, P.L. viii. 583 j S.A. 

U>; Cow?. 820. 201 

ditties, P. L. i. 449, xi. 584; divulges, P. It iii. 62. 

dizzy, 7 } . L. ii. 573 

. 457. do, P. L. i. 1 4-9, 152, 159, 160, 

diverfe, P. 7,. iy, 2:>l, x. 284. 414, ii. 199, iii- 105, iv. 392, 

diverted, l\ L. ix. 811; P. R. 4 7 5, 855, v. 121, vi. 56*6', 

; 19. 600, 683, ()!)5, mil 549, 562, 

ide, P. L. iv, 6&8, vii. 2 636, ix. 356, 375, 944, x. 

, ix. 21-1- : x. 379; 69,826, 1086, xii. 193, 501 ; 

Com. 279; Od* PaJ. 4. . 7'. ii. i. 75, 80, 88, 203, 3)77, 

ded, /'. I. iv 111, 233, si- 4 }3, tp5, ji. S5&38& 448,' 



VERBAL INDEX. 



- 455, iii. 8, 74, 180, 195, iv. 
489 ; S. A. 448, 486, 707, 
. 773, 1104, 1385; UAL 74; 
II Penf. 173 ; Com. 82, 122, 
. 373,392, 407, 438, 800 ; Od. 
D. F.I. 56, 76'; Vac. Ex. 
17, 25 ; Fore, of Con. 13 ; 
Hor. I. 1 ; Soph. 1 ; Pf ii. 1, 
iv. 19, v. 23, vi. 1, vii. 36, 
viii. 22, lxxxiii. 4, 33, 
Ixxxviii. 53. 
doat'd'it, P. R. ii. 175. 
dodor, S. A. 299. 
doctors, Com. 707 ; Ep. Hobf. II. 

19. 
doctrine, P. P. v. 856, xii. 506 ; 
P.R. ii. 474, iv. 290 ; S.A. 
297. 
dodg'd, Ep. Hobf. I. S. 
Dodona, P. X. i. 518. 
doer, aS'. ^4. 248. 
does, Co???. 223. 
doff, 5. A. 1410. 
doifd, Od. Nat. 33. 
dog, Co???. 405 ; Od. Nat. 212. 
dogs, P.L. x.6"l6; 5. .4.694; 

60??. xii. 4. 
doing* P. L. i. 158, ii. l62, 340, 
*.&& ; P. P. iii. 97 ; Com. 
535. 
doings, P. P. iv. 622, xi. 720, 
xii. 50; P.P. i.46'9; S.A. 
917 ; ' Ep.HabC. II. 27- 
dole, P. L. iv. 894 ; A'. .V. 1529- 
doleful, P. £. i. 65. 
dolorous, P. L. ii. 619, vi. 658 ; 
1^.8. 1. 364; Od. Nat. 140. 
dolphins, P. L. vii. 410; .%c. 

16"4. 
domain, P. P. iv. SI 
domains, Dante, I. 2. 
domeftickiP.L.iv.760, ix=31S, 

xi. 617 ; S.A. 917, 1048. 
dominations, P. X. iii. 392, v. 
■ 601, 772, 840, x. 87, 46*0. 
pominick, P. L. iii. 479. 
dominion, P. P. ii. 978, iii. 732, 
iv, 33, 4-30, v. 751, vi. 422, 



887, vii. 532 t viii. 545, x. 

244, 400, xii. 27, 68 ; P. R. 

ii. 434, iii. 296. 

dominions, P.L. ii. 11, iii. 320. 

donation, P. L. xii. 69 ; P. P. 

iv. 184. 
done, P. L. ii. 384, iii. 203, v. 

462, 844, vi. 241, 805,906, 

vii. 65, 151, 164, 506, 637 ', 

viii. 203, 56l, ix. 199, 375, 

835, 889, 926, x. 2, 15S, 175, 

470, xi. 694, 791, xii. 103, 

475; P.R. i. 15, ii.444,4S2, 

iii. 100, iv. 168,475; S.A. 

243, 478, 1104,1128,1594; 

Lye. 57, 67 ; L'Al. 115 ; 

Com. 137, 1012. 
doom, P. L. I 53, ii. 209, 550, 

iii. 159, 224, 328, 401, 404, 

iv. 840, vi. 278, 378, 38 5 % 

692, 817, ix. 763, 953, x. 76; 

172,344, 37S, 517,769,841, 

926, 1026, xi. 40, 76, 428 ; 

Sou. i. 10; Od. Nat. 156; 

Od.Cir. 17; Od. D. F.I. 33. 
doom'd, P. L. ii. 31 6, iv. 890, 

v. 907, x. 796 ; Lye. 92. 
door, P.L. i. 504, v. 299, vi. 9, 

x. 389, 443, xi. 73-1, 737 ; 

Lye. 130; Vac. Ex. 5, 34, 

85 ; Pf. Ixxxiv. 38, Ixxxviii, 

11. 
doors, P. L. i. 723, ii. SSI, iii. 

525, iv. 189, vii. 566, xi. 17; 

P.P. i. 82, 281; S.A. 950; 

L'Al. 113; II Penf. 84; Son. 

viii. 2. 

within doors, S. A. 77. 
Dorado, P. L, xi. 411. 
Dorian, P. L. i. 500 ; P. R. iv. 

237. 
Dorick, P. P. i. 519, 714; %c. 

189 J Son. xvii. 11 ; 0d. Nat, 

105 ; Pf. vii. 8, lxxxvi. 27. 

34. 
doll, P. P. i. 355, ii. 417, iii. 

44; S. A. 1092, 1178; 0</. 

D. F. I 37 ; Vac. Ex. 53 ; 



VERBAL IiVDEX.' 



£p. W. Sh. 14, 15; Dante, 

11. 2; Pf. iv. 39, Ixxx. 1, 
lxxxiii. 12,lxxxiv. 4, lxxxvi. 
64, lxxxviii. 22, 23. 

dotage, S. A. 1042. 

doth, Lye. 16, 70; 77 Pew/ 46; 
Com. 96, 1015 ; Son. xiv. 4; 
0d.D.F.I.6l;Ep.M.JVin. 
54 ; Tac. £*. 67 ; Pf. ii. 8, 
iv. 34, v. 16, lxxxiii. 30, 
lxxxiv. 5, 47, lxxxvi. 18, 
lxxxvii. 23, lxxxviii. 10, 30, 
55, 65, exxxvi. 10, 13, 85. 

Dothan, P. L, xi.717. 

double, P.L. iv. 102,1009, v. 
783, ix. 332, x. 850, 1040, 
xi. 129, 201; P.R. i. 435; 
S. A. 53, 593 ; Com. 335, 995. 

double-fac'd, S.A. 971. 

double-form'd, P.L. ii. 741. 

double-mouth'd, S. A. 97 1. 

double-founted, P. L. xii. 144. 

double-fhade, P. P. i. 500. 

doubled, P. L. i. 485, 616, vi. 
602. 

doubt, P. L. i. 558, ii. 94, iv. 
18, v. 554, vi. 563, 630, viii. 
13,64, 116,179, ix. 95, 251, 
279, 6*15, x. 793, xi. 211, 
xii. 473; P.P. i. 79, ii. H, 

12, 382, iii. 193; S. A. 43, 
300, 454, 740, 1379, 1534, 
1745; Com. 409 

in doubt, P.L. iv. 888,907. 
doubt not, P. L. ix. 244, x. 

1022, xi. 349, xii. 285. 

no doubt, P.P. iv. 426,795, 
890, viii. 568, ix. 257 ; 
P.P. iv. 473; S.A. 905. 

one doubt, P. L. x. 782. 
doubted, P. L. i. L14 s P.P. 

ii. 11, iv. 296. 
doubt'lt, P.P. ii. 377. 
doubtful, P. L. i. 527, ii. 154, 

203, 486, v. 682, vi. 423 ; 

S. A. 732. 
doubting, P. L. iv. 983; P.R. 

i. 137, ii. 147; S.A. 9*0. 



doubtlefs, P.L. ii. 31 5, ix.74>i^ 
5.-^. 1473. 

doubts, P. L. vii. 60; P.R. ii. 
368. 

dove, P. L. xi. 857 ; P. R. L 
30, 83, 282. 

dove-like, P. P. i. 21. 

down, P. P. i. 46, ii. 935, iii. 
651,740, vi. 36l, 593, 839, 
865, vii. 15, 73, viii. 157, 
ix. I69, 1121, x. 90, 184, 
305, 447, 513, 541, 542, 648, 
675, xi. 187, 209, 282, 392, 
506, 545, 568, 576, 743, 833, 
xii. 639; P.P. ii. 128,260, 
iv. 555,586, 631; S.A.322 y 
327, 569, 698, 1240, 1478, 
1493, 1650; Lye. 62, 63; 
L'Al. 110; II Ptnf. 107; 
Com. 568 ; Od. Nat. 48, 142, 
147 ; Od. Pajf. 16, 21 ; Od. 
D.F.I. 19; Ep.Hobf. 1.6; 
Pf. iv. 38, vii. 15, lxxx. 4o\ 
66, lxxxviii. 14. 

dowfl-caft, P. L. i. 523. 

down-dropt, P. L. ix. 893. 

downfall, P. P. i. Il6. 

downright, P. L. iii. 562. 

downs, P.L, iv. 252; Com. 505, 

downward, P. P. i. 463, 681, 
iii. 722, iv. 591, vii. 237, ix, 
79; UPcnf. 43; Com. 53. 

downy, P. L. iv. 334, v. 282, 
vii. 438, ix. 851. 

dower, P.L. v. 218. 

draff, P. L. x. 630 ; S. A. 574, 

drag, P. L. iv. 965, vi. 358, 
xii. 451 ; Com. 6()8. 

dragged, P. L. vi. 260. 

dragging, *S'. A. 1371. 

dragon, P. L. iv. 3, x. 529 ; 
S. A. 1692; II Ptnf. 59; 
Cow. 131 ; Od. Nat. 168. 

dragon- watch, Cow. 395. 

drain'd, P. L. iii. 605, vi. 851, 
xi. 570 ; P. P. ii. 346. 

drank, P. P. i. 352; S.A. 550, 

draught, & ^4. 9; Com. 701 y 



VERBAL INDEX. 



draughts, P. L. v. 306. 

draw, P. L. ii. 25, iii. l6l, 220, 

iv. 532, v. 729, vii. 306, 365, 

Viii. 348, ix. 822, 914, 9^6, 

x. 26'7; P.R.L 372; S.A. 

7, 178, 360, 804, 1058, 1267, 

1626 ; Lye. 126 ; Arc. 71 ; 

Com. 487, 554. 
draw off, P. L. iv. 782. 
draw on, P. L. ix. 223. 
draw out, P. L. x. 801 ; P. R. 

ii, 166. 
drawn, P. L. i. 664, iii. 379, 

509, 517, 522, iv. 63, vii. 14, 

x. 262, 5 1 1 , 8 86 ; 77 Pen/. 36. 
drawn out, UAL 140. 
draws, P. L. x. 245, xi. 205 ; 

P. R. ii. 168; S.A. 1041, 

1067; Sow. xxi. 6; P/. 

Ixxxviii. 12. 
draws in, P. L. vii. 21 6. 
draw'ft, P. X. iv. 975. 
dread, P. L. i. 333, 406, 555, 

589, 644, ii. 16, 263, 510, 

iii. 326, iv. 82, vi. 59, 648, 

ix. 158, x. 998, xi. 248, xii. 

14; P.R.i. 53, iii. 306, iv. 

576 ; S. A. 342, 1474, l6"73 ; 

Lye. 132; Cow. 405, 441; 

Od. Nat. 206; Pf. lxxx. 8. 

more dread, P. L. ix. 969. 

dreaded, P.L. i. 464, ii. 

293, 474, 964, iv. 929, vi. 

491, ix. 1114; P. R. i. 58; 

S. A. 530, 1417; 0d. Nat. 

222, 
dreadful, P. L. i. 130,183,564, 

ii. 426, 672, 706, iii. 393, iv. 

426, 990, vi. 105, 225, 828, 

pi. 335, x. 121, 521, 779, 

814,848. xii. 236, 644; S. A. 

1591, 1622 ; Od. Nat. 164 ; 

Brut. 13; Pf. lxxx. 67. 
dreading, S. 4> 733. 
dreadlefs, P. L. vi. 1. 
dream, P. L. ii. 315, v. 93, 98, 

J 15, 120, vii. 39, viii. 175, 

292, 310, 482, xi. 90i xii. 



386; P. JR. ii. 283, 337; 

Lye. 56; UAL 129 ; //. Pen/. 

147 ; Com. 4*57. 
dreamed, P.i.iii. 459, v.31, 32. 
dreaming, P. L. iii. 514. 
dreams, P. L. i. 784, iv. 803, 

v. 112, ix. 1050, xii. 595, 

611 ; P. JR. i. 395, iv. 291, 

408 ; II Pen/. 9 ; Com. 813. 
drear, P. L. x. 525 ; II Pen/. 

119; Cow 37; Od. Nat. 193. 
dreary, P. L. i. 180, ii. 6*18. 
dregs, P. L. vii. 238. 
drench, P. L. ii. 73; Son* 

xxi. 5. 
drench'd, P. L. xi. 367. 
drenches, Cowz. 996. 
drefs, P. X. ix. 205, xi. 583, 

620. 
drefles, UAL 86. 
drafting, Od. May-M. 7. 
dreft, Son. xiv. 11. 
drew, P. L. i. 472, ii. 308, 692, 

iii. 645, v. 710, vi. 798, vii. 

144, 480, viii. 284, ix. 434, 

57S, x. 629, xi. 845 ; S. A. 

736, 1596; IlPenf. 107. 
drew nigh, P.L. iii. 646, iv. 

86l, v. 82, xi. 238. 
drew on, P. L. ix. 739. 
dried, P. L. viii. 526; P. #. 

iv. 433. 
drift, P. P. iii. 4 ; £07*. xvii. 6. 
drink, P. L. v. 344, 637, vii. 

362, ix. 838, x. 728; P.P. 

i. 340, iii. 289, iv. 590; S.A. 

557 ; Son. xiv. 14 ; Pf. lxxx. 

23. 
drink'ft, P. L. xi. 532. 
drinks, P.L. ii. 584, v. 451, xi. 

473; P. P. ii. 265; S.A. 

541, 554 ; Com. 527- 
drive, P. L. i. 260, ii. 366, 367, 

iii. 438, iv. 155, vi. 52, 715, 

vii. 32, x. 290, xi. 105, S53 ; 

P. R. i. 153; Od.D.F.1.68; 

Ep. Hobf. II. 15. 
driven, P. L. i. 223, ii. 86, 366, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

772, iii. 677, iv. 753, ix. 62, drudge, P. L. ii. 732; 8, A. 

x. 240, 5S3, 843, xi. 842; 513, 1338, 1393. 

P. R. i. 300. drudging, L'/i/. 105. 

driven back, P. L. vii. 57- drugg'd, P. L. x. 56*8. 

driven down, P. L. vi. 738, x. drugs, P. L. ii. 040; Co;w. 255. 

1075. Druids, Lye. 53. 

driven out, P. X. vii. 185. drums, P. L. i. 394. 

drives, P. L. iv. 184, xi. 646 ; drunk, £. A. \6Jo. 

Pf. i. 12. dry, P. £• i. 227, ii. 898, 940, 
driving, Co.'??. 456; Vac. Ex.5, iii. 652, vii. 284, 292, 304,' 
drizzling, P. L. vi. .545. 307, ix. 179, x. 294,' xi. 544, 

dromedaries, P. P. iii- 335. 842, S6l, xii. 197; P.P. iii. 

drone, P. L. vii. 490; S. A. 567. 264 ; S. A. 582 ; 11 Pen/. 66 3 
droop, P. L. xi. 178; S.A.59h Od. D. F. 7.4. 

drooping, P. L. i. 328, vi. 496, dry-ey'd, P. L. xi. 405. 

ix. 430 ; P. R. iv. 434; L?/c. Dryad, P. L. ix. 387. 

1 60 ; Co??? .812. D ry ad es, Com . 964 . 

drop, P. L. ii. 6()7, xi. 535. dubious, P. L. i. 104, ii. 1042, 

drop ferenc, P. L. iii. 25. duck, Co???. 9J0. 

dropping, P. i. iv. 630, ix. due, P. L. i. 569, ii. 453, 454, 

5S2; P. P. iv. 434; Co???. 106; 850, iii. 190, 191, 245, 57 8, 

Od. Hor. 15. 738, iv. 48, 180, v. 303, 817, 

drops, P. L. ii.933, v. 23, 132, vi. 445, vii. 149, viii. 11, 

vii. 292, ix. 1002, xi. 416; 385, ix. 566, 800, x. 93, 

II Pinf. 130 ; Com. 912. 833, 994, xi. 253, 440, 533, 

dropiies, P. L. xi. 488. xii. 12, 152, 264, 399, 400 ; 

dropt, P. L. i. 745, ii. 1 13, vi. P. R. iii. 10, 87, 440 ; S, A. 

839, vii. 406, xii. 645; 513, 1055, 1225; Lye. 7; 

P. R. i. 324; Lye. 191 ; 1JAL37; U Pcnf. 155; Com, 

Com. 840; Otf. Po//.' 16. 12, 199, 306, 776; Pf. vii. 

drofs, P. L. i. 704; P. P r iii. 57, lxxxiii. 59. 

29 ; Od. on Timt, 6. duel, P. I,.' xii. 387 ; P. P. i. 
droflieft, P. L. v. 442. 174 ; S, A. 1102. 

drove, P. L. i. 418, iv. 169, vi. duell'd, S. ^/. 345. 

831, 858, x. 287, xi. 186, dues, Cow?. \3J. 

7?>9 ; P. P. i. 90 ; 5. A. 209 ; dulcet, P. L. i. 7 1 2, v. 347. 

//'/c 27 ; Com. 115. dulcimer, P. L. vii. 596. 

diov'lt, P. L. iii. 396; J^ dull, //,-;/. 42; Co;??. 477, 634„ 

Lxxx. 3 5. duly, P. L. v. 145 ; L'^/. 100. 

droul'e, P. /,. xi. 131. dumb, l\ L. ix. 527; Com. 
dn.ulrd, P. L. viii. 2«9- /<)'>; Orf. JW. 173; J^c* 

drouth, P. /.. vii. 60 ; P, P. i. 5. 

325, iii. 274; Co//;. 66, 928. Dun, T//r. /u-. 92. 

n, /'. £,. xi. 894. dun, P. L. iii. 72 ; Com. 127. 

dro\vn'd,P. //. \ii.3(),\i. 13,757- Dunbar, Son. xvi. 8. 

drowfirtcft, .-//v. 0l. dung, Pf lxxxiii. 40. 

drowfy, 11 Penf, 83$ Co;??. 553: dungeon, /'. L. i.O'i, ii. 317, 

I «o. £*. 6 ! . 1003, x. ^66, 697 ; 8, A. $9 t 



VERBAL INDEX. 



15o, 367; Lye, 97; Cam. 

349, 385. 
durable, P. L. v. 581, x. 320. 
durance, P. L. iv. 899- 
durft, P. i. i. 49, 102, 382; 

385, 391, iii. 220, iv. 704; 

829, vi. 155, viii. 237, ix. 

1180; P.R.i. 100, 324 ; iv. 

580; S. A. 1110, 1113, 

1130, 1255, 1256; Com. 577, 

615. 
dufk, P. L. ix. 741 ; P. JR. i. 

296, iv, 76. 
dufky, P. I. i. 226, ii. 488, v. 

186, 667, vi. 58; Com. 99; 

Od. Nat. 223: 
iluft, P. X. iv: 416, v. 516, vii. 

292, 525, 577, ix. 178, x. 

178, 208, 748, 770, 805, 

1085, xi. 199, 460, 46*3, 529 ; 

S. A. 141 ; Com. 165 ; Od. Cir. 

19; P/ vii. 16, 17. 
duteous, P. I. ix. 521. 
duty, P. L. i. 3$3, x. 106; 

P. P. ii. 326, iii. 172, 1/5; 

S. A. 853, 870. 
dwarfs, P. L. i. 779- 
dwell, K-i. i. 4,7, 66, ii. 86, 

398, 841j iii. 249, 335,6/0, 

iv. 377, v. 373, 456, 500, vi. 

292, 380, 788, vii. 156, 329, 

627, viii. 185, ix. 125, 322, 

729, x. 399, 492, 587, xi. 

43, 48, 1/8, 259, 348, 608, 

838, 901, xii. 22, 146, 248, 

281, 316, 344,487; P. ii.i. 

116, 331, 391, 462; JJAV. 

10; II Pen/. 5; Com, 667 ; 

Son. xiv. 2; Pf. ii. 8, iv. 

42, lxxxiii. 24, lxxxiv. 4, 

39, Ixxxv. 40, lxxxviii. 47, 

exxxvi. 74. 
dwelling, P. L. iv. 378, 884, 

viii. 118; P.P. ii. 80. 
dwelling-pla.ee, P. L. ii. 57, 

vii. 625. 
dwellings, P. L. vii. 1S3, 570, 



xi. 747; Pf- lxxxiv. l f 

lxxxvii. 6. 
dwells, P. L. i. 250, iii. 2lG, 

225, viii. 103, xii. 84; S.A. 

159, 1673; Com. 428, 521, 

988. 
dwell'ft, P.I. vii. 7; P.H. iv.. 

466 ; Com. 268. 
dwelt, P. L. iii. 5, 570, iv. 

214, ix. 836; Od. Cir. 18; 

Brut. 9- 
dye, Od. D. F. I. 5. 
dy'd, P. L. x. 1009. 
dying, P. L. iii. 296, 299, 479, 

x. 964, 974 ; Od. Nat. 193 % 

Ep. M. Win. 42. 



E. 

Each, P. I. i. 356, 704, 707, 
737, ii- 26, 181, 421, 523, 
535, 6'70, 711, 714, QOl, iii. 
516, 5S4, 720, iv. 114, 120, 
240, 408, 696, 697, 1003, v. 
1 33, 145, 279, 326, 327, 337, 
428, 477, 479, 576, vi. 98f 
230, 23 1 , 233, 238, 362, 498, 
529, 530, 541 , 542, 578, 753, 
782, vii. 327,334, 391, 392 # - 
399, 453, viii. 152, 156, 223, 
306, 342, 349, 351, 393, 514, 
582, ix. 66, 179, ; 259, 428, 
438, 449, 45 1 , 660, 673, 674/ 
800, 1019, 10o2, 1093, x. 
176, 324, 440, 604, 678, 
xi. 128, 587, 765, 889, 
xii. 57, 142, 503. P. R. j. 
304, ii. 1 9, 155, 240,- 406,462, 
iii.. 327, iv. 4/5; S. A. 65, 
397,1087,1089,1599,1607, 
1617, 1655 ; Lye. 83 ; Corn. 
19, 456, 839;^ So/?, xv. 2, 
xvii. 10, 11; Od. Nat. 100, 
I96, 234 ; Od. on Tmc, 9 ; 
Vac. Ex.35; Ep. W. Sk 10; 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Pf ii. 4, lxxxviii. 56. See 

Side. 
each one, Pf iv. 21. 
each other, P. L. ii. 502, ix. 

220, x. 112, 235, 513,712, 

956. 
each other's, P. i. x. 961. 
each to other's, P. L. iv. 683. 
eager, P. L. vi. 378, ix. 740; 

Lye. 189- 
eagerly, P. L. ii. 947. 
eagle, P. L. vii. 423; S. A. 

1695. 
eagles, P. L. v. 271. 
eagle-wing'd, P. L. vi. 763. 
ear, P. L.L 787, ii. 117, 920, 

953, iii. 193, 647, iv. 410, 

800, v. 36', 545, 626, 810, 

vi. 350, viii. 1,49,211,335, 

606, ix. 47, x. 506", 1060, xi. 

30, 152, 435, xii. 236'; P.P. 

i. 479, iii- 390, iv. 272, 

337; S. A. 177, 858, 921, 

937 , 1172, 1568; Lye. 49; 

L'Al 14S; J/Pew/. 120, l64; 

i4fc. 73; Cow. 170, 203, 

458, 560, 570, 784; Od. Cir. 

3; Pf. v. 1, lxxx. 2, lxxxiv. 

30, lxxxvi. 1, 18, lxxxvii. 

17, lxxxviii. 8. 
earlier, UAL 89- 
earlieft, P. L. iv. 642, 651 ; 

P. ft ii. 365; Son. ix. 1. 
early, P. L. ix. 225, 457, 799, 

xi. 275; S. A. 1596; Arc. 

56; Son. xviii. 14; Ep. M. 

Win. 23; IW. May-M. 9; 

Pf. v. 5. 
«arl, So/*, x. 1. 
carl's, Ej>. flf. 07». 3. 
earn, /'. L. ii. 473, x. 1051, xi. 

375; l*. R. i- 167; L'Al. 

106. 
earn'd, P. L x. 592; P. P. ii. 

401. 

earned, P. 7,. x. 553 ; S. A. 
359; fif^ III. 2; i'/. iv. 6. 

iueaindi,P. L.i.458,ix.939- 



earneftly, P. X. ix. 1141 ; P. it, 
ii. 367. 

earns, S. A. 1250. 

ears, P. L. iv. 982, v. 771, vi?. 
35, 70, 177, ix. 736, x. 99 f 
780; P. R. i. 199; 5. A. 
1231; %c. 77; Cow. 272, 
706,997; Son. xiii. 14; Od. 
Nat. 94, 126; Fac. Ex. 28; 
Pore. 0/' Cow. 17. 

earth, P. L. i, 9, 360, 509, 
687, 710, 785, ii. 383, 502, 
927, 1004, iii. 133,146,274, 
322, 335, 444, 520, 528, 651, 
685, 715, 724, 731, 739, iv. 
152, 228, 341,432, 540, 546, 
594, 645, 661, 677, 722, 733, 
1000, v. 2,78, 88, 141, 190, 
201,260,338,401,416,417, 
519,574, 578, 649, 752, vi. 
218, 516, 640, vii. 63, 90, 
124,160,167,232,242,256, 
269, 276, 278, 307, 309, 312, 
313,328,332,333,335,350, 
389, 451, 452, 453,468, 471, 
501,502,522,531,541, 56C, 
624, viii. 16, 17, 23, 32, 70, 

• 89, 91, 96, 98, 120, 129, 
137, 144, l6l, 17S, 274, 306, 
338, 36'9, 4S3, 513, ix. 50, 
59,99, 149, 153, 273, 605, 
65S, 720, 782, 1000, 1011, 
x. 22, 36, 57, 69, .94, 325, 
638, 647, 653, 669, 776, 835, 
xi. 66, 136, 335, 339, 345, 
379, 473, 568. 744, 804, S83, 
888, 893, 896, 90 1, xii. 29, 
147,463, 549, 579; P.P. i. 
6*3, 218, 237, 365, ii. 44, 
114, 124, 435, iii. 6l, 65, 
246, iv. 30, 45, 148, 201, 
433, 453, 566; S. A. 174, 
1272; Cow. 6, 712,730,797; 
Son. xx. 7 ; Od. Nat. 63, 108 , 
63, 108, 1 60, 1 89 ; Od. Paf&. 2, 
32; Od. D.F. 1. 17; Ep. M. 
Win. 32; Brtit. 3; Pf ii. 2>, 
, vii. 15, viii. 2, 24* 



VERBAL INDEX. 

Ixxxii. 25, 26, lxxxiii. 68, eafieft, P. L. iv. 47, viii. 183, 

lxxxv, 45, cxiv. 9, 15, xi. 119, 549; P. P. iii. 128, 

cxxxvi. 14, 22. iv. 36l. 

earth-born, P. L. i. 198, iv. eafily, P. L. i. 696, iii. 94, 301, 

360; Vac. Ex. 93. vi. 596, vii. 48, 609, x. 31, 

earth-making, Com. 869. 136, xi. 141 ; P. R. i. 471, 

all earth, P. P. iii. 24. ii. 194, iii. 156, iv. 126, 16'8 ; 

from earth, Ep. M. Win. 6. S. A. 48, 291, 409, 9*3, 

on earth, P. L. i. 382, ii. 1005, 1466 ; Od. Pafs. 54. 

484, iii. 64, 283, 451, 457, eafing, P. L. vii. 430, x. 260. 

508, 592, iv. 5, 208, 672, eaft, P. L. ii. 3, iv. 178, 209, 

940, v. 164, 224, 329, 576, 595, 623, v. 142, 339, vii. 

vi. 195, 299, 374, 893, vii. 30, 245, 370, 380, 583, viii. 

23, 345, 398, 534, 581,629, 138, l62, x. 685, 203, xii. 

▼iii. 118, 224, ix. 8 13, x. 72, 141; P. R. i. 250, ii. 197; 

229, 273, 360, 399, 404, 679, Com. 101 ; Od. May-M. 2. 

891, 897, xi. 22, 698, 780, eaftern, P. L. i. 341, iii. 557, 

825, xii. 183, 281,437, 528; iv. 542, v. 1, 275, xi. 190, 

P. R i. 99, 125, 131, iii. 68; xii. 362, 638, 641; S. A. 

S. A. 165 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 17- 548 ; L'Al. 59; Com. 138 ; 

earthly, P. L. v. 464, vii. 14, Od. Nat. 22. 

82, 179, viii. 120, 453, 522, eaft-iide, P. L. xi. 118. 

ix. 1083, xii. 315 ; P. R. iv. eaftward, P. L. iv. 211, v. 309, 

612 ; Son. xiv. 3 ; Od. Nat. x. 292, xii. 145. 

138. eafy, P.L.u. 81, 256, 1031, 

earth's, P. L. i. 778, v. 302, iii. 524, iv. 421, 433, vi. 

321, viii. 99, 631, ix. 195, 437, 499, 632, vii. 304, ix. 

273, 1041, xi. 384, xii. 371; 24, 569, 734, x. 58, 305, 

P.P. iv. 456, 562; Com. 393; P. R'. i. 120, iii. 293: 

244, 599, 1014; Od. D.F.I. Com. 286; Ep. W. Sh. 10. 

30, 47; Pf. ii. 19, lxxxii. 19. eafy-hearted, Com. l63. 

earthy, P. L. iv. 583, ix. 157 ; as eafy, S. A. 583. 

Od. on Time, 20. . more eafy, P. X. it. 330. 

eafe, P. L. i. 320, ii. 227, 26l, fo eafy, S. A. 95. 

458, 878, 1041, iii. 563, iv. eat, P. L. v. 637, viii. 147. 

96, 187, 329, 632, 893, v. 309, 320, 322, ix. 595, 657, 

59, 439, ix. 129, 245, 801, 660,662,706,762,781,997, 

1120, x. 394, 622, xi. 536, x. 122, 143, 162, 178, 200, 

794 ; P- P. iv- 97, 299, 378 ; 202, 204, 205, 728, xi. 94, 

S. A. 17, 18,271, 917; Lye. xii. 186; P. R. i. 352, ii. 

152; Cow. 687; Od.Cir. 11;, 274,275,314,321,336,368, 

Ep.Hobf.lL 21. 377;L'AL 102; P/.lxxx. 22 

at eaie, P. L. ii. 521, 841, eaten, P. L. ix. 764, 869, x. 

868, vii. 407, ii. 201. 121, 199- 

eaf'd, P. L. iv 739, xii. 274. eafft, P. L. vii. 544, viii. 329, 

euiier, P. L. ii. 345, 5/3, iv. xi. 532. 

943, vi. 37, 286, viii. 626, eating, P. L. ix, 79%, 1005; 

ix. 699r 978 ; 5. ^. 772. UAL 135. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tats, P. L. ix. 724. 

eaves, 11 Paif. 130. 

ebb, P. L. xi. 847. 

ebbing, Com. 19. 

ebon, L'AL 8 ; Com. 134. 

Ecbatan, P. L. xi. 3.93. 

ecccntrick, P. L. iii. 575, v. 

623, viii. 83. 
echo, P. X. x. 86 1 ; Co?n. 231, 

275. 
echoed, P.L. v. 873. 
•choes, Lye: 41 ; Orf. Nat. 100; 

Otf. Pafs. 53. 
echoing, P. L. iv. 681, ix. 

1107; L'Al. 56. 
eclipfe, P.L. i. 597, x. 413; 

& A. SI; Lye. 101. 
eclipfel, P.L. v. 776, xi. 183. 
eclipfes, P.L. ii. 666. 
ecliptick, P. L. iii. 740. 
Ecron, S.A. 981. 
ecftafies, 1/ Pew/ l65. 
rcltaiy. Com. 6'25. 
ecftatick, Od. Pafs. 42. 
Eden, P. L. i. 4, iv. 27, 132 

210, 213, 223, 275, 507, 569, 

vi. 75, vii. 65, 5S2, viii; 113, 

ix. 54, 77, ^93, 341, x. 89, 

xi. H9, 342, xii. 40, 46*5, 

649 ; P- P- i- 7. 
Eden's, P. L. v. 143. 
edge, P. L. i. 276, 460, vi. 108, 
! 323 ; P. it. ii. 455; Lye. 

| ( ) •■■ 
tdg'd,&*. AV. 185. 
edict, P. L. v. 798. 
idiots S. A. 301. 
edifice, P. L. viii. 104 J P: P. 

iv. 55 ; ,S\ ^i. 1588. 
I .1,,!,., P/: Ixxxiii. 21. 
i dorafte, P. 11. ii. 423. 
Edward (king), Son. xi. i i. 
Edwards, P"/-c. "/ Goto. \&, 
e'en or even, P. L. i. 1 16, 680, 

iii. 586, *. 83, 837,ix. 1079, 

x. 191, xi- 1 IS, 418. 

P, t, ii. S<#, iii. 6*12, vi. 
, vii. 175, viii. 95, ix. 



865; P. R. ii. 215; 5/^. 

681 ; Com. 630. 
effected, P. L. i. 647, ix. 152. 
effetfs, P. L. ix. 650, 875, xL 

424. 
effectual, P. L. iii. 170; P.J?. 

iv. 432. 
effeminacy, S. A. 410. 
effeminate, P. L. xi. 634; P. 2?. 

iv. 142. 
effeminately, S. A. 562. 
efficacious, <5. A: 1437. 
efficacy, P, Z>.' x. 660. 
effluence, P. L. iii. 6. 
effulgence, P. L. iii. 388, v. 

458, vi. 680. 
effufd, P. L. xi. 447. 
effufion, P. L. vi. 765. 
egg, P.L. vii. 418. 
eglantine, L'AL 48. 
egrefs, P. L. ii. 437- 
Egypt, P. L. i. 421, 480, 488/ 

721, iii. 537, iv. 171, xii; 

157, 190, 219; P. ft. ii. 76, 

79, iii- 379, 384; Com. 676; 

Pf: lxxx. 33', Ixxxi. 42 1 , 

lxxxvii. 11, exxxvi. 38. 
Egyptian, P. L. v. 274, ix; 

4!' 1 ., xii. 182. 
Egypt's, P. L. i. 339- 
eject, P. L. xi. 52. 
ejected, 5. ^. 1207; P. ft. iv 

414. 
eighth, P. L. ix. 67. 
either, P. L. i.424, 644, ii. 96,' 

229, 364, 538, 670, 721, iii. 

350, 487, 641, v. 131, 284. 

vi. 214, 570, 778, viii. 388, 

ix.284, 407, 1176, x. Ill, 

126, 898, xi. 363, 505; P.R. 

iv. 409; 6'. A. 1033, 1292, 

1458; Com. 4 S3; Son. xvii. 

12,xix. 10. See Side. 
El Dorado, P. L. xi. 411. 
elaborate, P. J,, viii. 539. 
old, Od. D.F. I. 13. 
eldeft, P. L. ii. 894, 902 fe 

180; S«j. xvii. 14. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Eleale, P. L. i. 411. 

elecl, P. L. iii. 136, 184, 360, 
vi. 374, xii. 214. 

eleded, S. A. 678. 

ele&ion, P. L. x. 764. 

Ele&ra's, Sorc. viii. 13. 

elegant, P. X. ix. 1018. 

element, P. L. ii. 490, vii. 16, 
viii. 348; P. R. ii. 122; -ft 
Pe?if.96'> Com. 299. 

elemental, P. X. vii. 265. 

elements, P. L. ii. 275, 925, 
1015, iii. 715, iv. 993, v. 
180, 415, vi. 222, xi. 50; 
P. R. ii. 334. 

elephant, P. L. iv. 345. 

elephants, P. R. iii. 329- 

elevate, P. L. ii. 558 ; P. JR. iv. 
34. 

elevates, P. L. ix. 633. 

elfe, Com. 846. 

Eli's, P. L. i. 495. 

Elijah, P. it. ii. 268, 277. 

elixir, P.L. iii. 607. 

elops, P.L, x. 525. 

elm, P.L. v. 216; Arc. 89; 
Co?w. 354. 

elms, UAL 58. 

elocution, P. X. ix. 748. 

eloquence, P. i. ii. 556, v. 
149, ix. 671 ; P. JR. iv. 241, 
268, 354. 

eloquent, Son. x. 8. 

elfe, P. L. i. 96, 109, 683, ii. 
397, 591, 769, iii. 125, 635, 
725, iv. 392, 434, 752, 86*1, 
929, v. 63, vi. 593, 896, vii. 
49, 74, 129, 639, viii. 10,97, 
131, 135, 524, 531, 636, 786, 
ix. 975, 1117, x. 678, 689, 
806, 1079, 1096, xi. 201, 
299, 305, 572, 747 ; P. £. 
i. 12, iii. 28, 394, iv. l65, 
299; S. A. 6, 315, 586,604, 
694,770, 1524; Lye. 120; 
J/JEVk/: 116; Arc. 6l 1 Com. 
195, 484, 491 ; Od. Nat. 91 ; 
Ep. Hobf. I. 3 ; Pf. iv. 12. 



elfe where, P. .£. i. 656, iii. 

599y x. 959, P. it. i. 458, 

iv. 325. 
elves, P. L. i. 781 ; Cow. 118. 
elude, P. L. ix. 158. 
Elyfian, P. L. iii. 359; L'AL 

U7 \ Com. 996 ;0d. D.F.I. 

40. 
Elyfmm, P. L. iii. 472 ; Cow. 

257. 
Emathian, P. it. iii. 290; Son. 

viii. 10. 
embaffies, P. it. iv. 67, 121. 
embafiy, P. L. iii. 658. 
embattled, P. L. i. 129, vi. 16, 

550, vii. 322, xii. 213 ; S. A. 

129. 
embellifhed, P. L. iii. 507. 
embers, 1/ Pen/. 79. 
emblem, P. L. iv. 703. 
embolden'd, P. L. viii. 434* 
embofs, P. L. xii. 180. 
emboli, S. A. 1700. 
emboweird, P. L. vi. 587. 
embrace, P. L. viii. 626, xii. 

426; Son. xxiii. 13. 
embraced, P. L. ix. 990. 
embraces, P. L. ii. 793, iv. 322, 

471, v. 215, x. 994; S.A. 389. 
embracing, P. L. iv. 494, 771, 

v. 27, vii. 90, x. 912. 
embroidery, Lye. 148. 
embroil'd, P. L. ii. 966. 
embroils, P. X. ii. 908. 
embryon, P. £. ii. 900, vii. 

277. 
embryos, P. L. iii. 474. 
emerald, Com. 894. 
emergent, P. L. vii. 286. 
Emilian, P. it. iv. 69. 
Emims, S.A. 1080. 
eminence, P. L. ii. 6, iv. 44, 

viii. 624. 
eminent, P. L. i. 590, iv. 219, 

v. 594, xi. 665, 789 ■> P. -R. 

ii. 70, iii. 91. 
eminently, P. L, ix. 976; Sew. 

ix. 3. 



VOL. I, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



emmet, P. L. vii. 485. 
Empedocles, P. L. iii. 471. 
emperour, P. L. ii. 510, x. 429 ; 

P. R. iy. SI, 90, 126. 
emperour's, P. L. i. 378. 
empire, P. L. i. 114, ii. 296, 

315,327,974, iv. Ill, 145, 

390, v. 724, vi. 303, vii. 96, 

555, 609, x. 389, 592, ix. 

3S7, 397, xii. 32, 581; P. P. 

i. 63, iii- 45, 296; iv. 222, 

284, 369 ; Od. D. F. I. 16. 
empires, P. L. ii. 378 ; P.P. ii. 

435, iii. 237- 
empire's, P. P. iii. 45, 270. 
empirick, P. L. v. 440. 
employ, P. t. v. 730 ; 0<Z. Sol. 

Muf. iii. 
employ'd, P. L. iii. 628, iv. 

726, 883, v. 219, ix. 229. 
employments, P. L. v. 125. 
employs, P. X. iv. 763. 
cmprefs, P. L. ix. 568, 626. 
emprife, P. P. xi. 642; Com. 

610. 
emptied, P. L. i. 633; P. P. i. 

414; Od.Cir. 20. 
emptier, P. L. ii. 1045. 
empties, P. L. iii. 731. 
emptinefs, P. P. viii. 195. 
empty, P. P. iii. 454, vii. 39, 

xi. 16. 
empty-vaulted, Com. 250. 
empyreal, P. P. i. 11 7, ii. 430, 
1047, iii- 699, v. 253, 460, 

583, vi. 14, 433, vii. 14, x. 
380. 
empyrean, P.P. ii. 771, iii. 57, 
vi. 833, vii. 73, 633, x. 321. 
emulate, P. P. ix. 963. 
emulation, P.P. ii. 298. 
tvulouft, P. />. vi. 822. 
enamelTd, P. L. iv. H9, ix. 

525; Lijc. 139; v//c 84. 
enamour, P. P. ii. 214. 
enamour d, P. L. ii. ?65, iv. 

169. v.i:;,!is, 
encamp, P.L. ii. 132. 



encamp'd, P. i. x. 276, xi. 656, 

xii. 591. 
encamping, P. L. vi. 412, Pf. 

iii. 17. 
enchanted, 5. ^.934; Cow?. 517- 
enchanter, Com. 645, 814. 
enchanting, P. P. x. 353; P. P. 
ii. 158; 5.^. 1065; Lye. 5$; 
Com. 245. 
enchantments, 5.^. 1133; It 

Pen/. 119 ; Q#m. 640, 696. 
enclofe, P. P. i. 6l7- 
enclosed, P. P. ii. 512, iii. 420, 
iv. 283, vi. 101, vii. 486, ix. 
494, 722; S.A. 194, 1117- 
enclofing, P. P. iii. 36l. 
enclofure,P. P. iv. 133, ix. 543. 
encompafs'd, P. L. iii. 149, v * 

876; Py. lxxxi. 30. 
encounter, P. P. ii. 718. 
encountered, P. L. vi. 664. 
encountering, P. P. vi. 220. 
encounters, S. A. 1085. 
encreafe, P.L. iv. 748, x. 486, 
730,731; Ep. Hubf. II. 32 ; 
P/>. ill. Win. 51; iy.iv. 36. 
encreas'd, P. P. x. 351, xii. 

155, P.P. ii. 12. 
encroach'd, P. P. ii. 1001. 
encroachment, P. L. xii. 72. 
end, P. P. i. 164, ii. 89, 145, 
157, 186, 538, 56l, 807, iii- 
157, 197,406, 633, iv. 39S, 
833, vi. 172, 258, 288, 493, 
703, 731, vii. 79> 108, 217,- 
505, 591, viii. 35, 540, ix.. ")1, 
241, x. 53, 167, 446, 641, 
720,725,797,856,977,1020, 
1084, xi. 300, 502, 6*05, 755, 
786, xii. 6, 556, 605; P. R. 
i. 125, 205, 408; ii. 114, 245, 
337, iii. 123, 185, 197,211, 
350, iv. 20; S.A. 232, 46l, 
576,704,709,871,998, 
1008, 1265, 1720; Arc. 7; 
Com. 136, 196,' 783, 1014; 
Od. D. P. /. 77 ; Ep. Hobf. 
1.12. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ho end, P. L. iv. 442, viii. 
189, ix. 7^8, 1189, x. 
1004, xii. 330 ; P. R. i. 
241, iv. 151 ; Pf lxxxi. 64. 

without end, P.L. i. 67, ii. 
870, iii. 142, v. l65, 615, 
vi. 137, vii. l6l, 542, x. 
797; P.R. ii. 442, iv. 
391 ; Pf. lxxxv. 17. 
endangered, P. L. i. 131, ii. 

1017. 
endear, S. A. 796. 
endearing, P. L. iv. 337* 
endeavour, P. L. xii. 355 ; P. P. 

iii. 353; S. A. 766; Son. 

xiv. 5. 
endeavour'd, P. L. iii. 192. 
endeavouring, P. L. viii. 260 ; 

P. R. iii. 399- 
ended, P. L. ii. 106, 291, 390, 

487j 514, 651, iii. 266, iv. 

874, vi. 98, 296, 496, 569, 

viii. 1,452, ix. 468, 733, x. 

937, 1007, xi. 72, 137, 238, 

246, xii. 552, 606 ; P. R. i. 

106,309,346; Od. D.F.I. 

18; Ep. Hobf. II. 10. 
ending, P. L. iii. 729, vi. 702 ; 

IlPenf. 129 ; Od.Nat. 226. 
endlefs, P. X. i. 142, ii. 30, 159, 

897, iv. 52, vi. 694, x. 754, 

810, xii. 549; P. P. iii. 178. 

Son. xv. 10 ; Od. Sol.Muf. 28. 
Endor, Pf. lxxxiii. 39. 
endow, P. L. ix. 149. 
endow'd, P. L. iv. 715, xi. 5S. 
ends, P. L. v. 586, xi. 345, 

602; P.P.iv. 410; S.A.62, 

893, 1043; Com. 160; Pf. 

lxxxvii. 15. 
endue, P. L. xii. 500. 
endued, P. L. ii. 356, v. 473, 

815,-vii. 507, viii. 353, ix. 

324, 56l, 871; P.P. ii. 437, 

iv. 98, 602. 
endu'th, Son. vii. 8. 
endurance, P. L. ii. 262. 
endure, P. L, ii, 206, iv. 811, 



920, 925, ix. 833, xi. 365, 
xii. 324, 405 ; P. R. i. 476, 
ii. 251, iv. 174; S.A.477; 
Pf cxxxvi. 3. 

endur'd, P. L. i. 299, ii- 1028, 
v. 783, vi. Ill, 431; S. A. 
1293. 

endures, P. L. ix. 269. 

enemies, P. L. ii. 157, vi. 466, 
677 , 826, x. 219, 625, xii. 
318,415, 482; P. it iii.36l, 
392,432; 5.^. 34,68, 112, 
540, 640, 782, 878, 1159, 
1202, 1582, 1711, 1725 ; Pf. 
vi. 15, 21, lxxxi. 60. 

enemy, P. L. i. 188, ii. 137, 
785, iv. 825, v. 239, viii. 234, 
ix. 274, 304, 494., 905, 1 172, 
xii. 390 ; P. R. ii. 126,330, 
372, iv. 525; S.^. 238, 380, 
856, 882, 1416; Pf vii. 13, 
viii. 7, cxxxvi. 83. 
arch enemy, P. L. i. 81. 
no enemy, P. L. ii. 822. 

enerve, P.R. ii. l65. 

enfeebled, P. L. ix. 488. 

enforce, S. A. 1223. 

enforc'd, P. L. xi. 419 J P* -K- 
i. 472, ii. 75. 

engage, P. P. iii. 347 ; Pf vii. 
23. 

engaged, P. L. iv. 954, ix. 400; 
Com. 193. 

engaging, P. L. ix. 963. 

engine, P. L. ii. 65, iv. 17; 
Lye. 130 ; .Ep. #06/. II. 9. 

enginery, P. X. vi. 553. 

engines, P. L. i. 750, ii. 923 ; 
vi. 484, 518, 586, §50. 

England's, Son. x. 2. 

Englifh, Son. xiii. 2. 

engrave, P. JL. xii. 524. 

engraven, P. L. ii. 302. 

enjoin'd, P. L. ix. 207, x. 57-5, 
xi. 177; S.A. 6. 

enjoin'ft, P. £. v. 563. 

enjoining, S. A. S70. 

enjoins, P. i. ix, 357. 



r 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



enjoy, P. L. iii. 471, iv. 433, 
445, 472, 507, 534, v. 503, 
viii.365, 523, 623, ix. 1032, 
X. 758, xi. 142, 804; P. R. 
i. 36'4, ii. 203, iii. 360. iv. 
<)4 ; S. A. 807, 991 ; Com. 
382, 790. 
enjoy'd, P.L. i. 683, viii. 584, 
ix. 264; P.P.i. 125; S.A. 
915. 
enjoy'dft, P. L. xii. 580. 
enjoy'ft, P. L. viii. 622. 
enjoying, P. L. iii. 306, iv. 446, 
viii. 366, ix. 829, S.A. 157. 
enjoyment, P. L. vi. 452 ; Com. 

742. 
enjoyments, P. L. viii. 531. 
enjoys, Od. Hor. 9- 
enlarg'd, P. L. i. 415, iv. 390. 
enlarges, P. L. viii. 590. 
enlighten, P. £. iii. 731, iv. 

668, xi. 115. 
enlightened, P. L. vi. 497, viii. 

274. 
enlightener, P. L. xii. 271. 
enlightening, P. L. viii. 143. 
enmity, P. L. i. 431, ii. 500, 
ix. 465, 1151, x. 180, 497, 
925 ; S. A. 1201 ; Vac. Ex. 
88. 
Enna, P. L. iv. 269. 
ennobled, P. L. ix. 992 ; S. A. 

1491 ; I/Peif/ 102. 
enormous, P.L. i. 511, v. 297, 

vii. 411. 
enough, P. L. iv. 124, vii. 125, 
viii. 535, 537, ix. 1169, x. 
059, xi. 766, 805 ; S. A. 
431,455, 1256, 1468, 1592; 
Com. 780, 958 ; Son. xiii. 6; 
P/! lxxxi. 43. 
enow, P. 7,. ii. 504; Lgc. 114. 
enrage, /\ L. ii. 698. 
enrag'd, P. /,. i.2l6, ii. 95 
enrich, Com. 505. 
enfanguiiiM, P. />. xi.654. 
enflirinc, P, L. i. 719, v. 273, 
xii. 334. 



enflirin'd, P. R, iv. 59S. 
entign, P. L. i. 536, vi. 775. 
enfigns, P. £. i. 325, ii. 886, v, 
588, vi. 356, 533 ; P. ii. iv. 
65. 
enflave, P. R. iii. 75. 
enflav'd, P. L. ii 333, xi. 797 ; 

P.R. 144; £.^. 1041. 
enfnare, S. A. 860 ; Com. 700 ; 

P/". lxxxiii. 11. 
cnfnar'd, P. X. iv. 717; S. A. 

365 ; Co?n. 909. 
enfue, P. L. iv. 26, 527, v. 682, 
vi. 456, ix. 827, 977 1 1185, 
xi. 839, xii. 331. 
enfued, P. L. iv. 991, vii. 40. 
entangled, S. A. 763. 
enter, P.L. iii. 26l, iv. 563, 
704, v. 464, ix. 90, x. 503, 
623, xii. 456 ; S.A. 463, 950. 
enter'd, P. L. i. 193, 731, iv; 
373, vi. 388, ix. 1 88, xi. 630, 
735 ; P. ii. ii. 292 ; 6'. A. 
252, 1597; Com. 646; Od. 
Paf 17; Od. Cir. 11. 
entering, P. L. vi. 326, viii. 40, 
xii. 217; P. Ii. i. 174, iv. 62. 
enterprife, P. L. i. 89, ii. 345, 
46*5; P. ii. ii. 411, iii. 228; 
S. A. 1223. 
enterprifes, S. A. 804. 
enterprifeit, P. L. x. 2y0. 
enters, P. L. vi. 10. 
entertain, P. L. ii. 526, iv. 382, 
v. 328, 383, vi. 6 11; Lye. 
17S. 
entertain'd, P. L. iv. 166, X. 

105, 1009. 
entertainment, P. L. v. 69O. 
enthrall, P.L. ii. 551, iii. 125, 

xii. 94. 
enthrall'd, P. L. iii. 176, vi. 

181 ; Com. 590. 
en th raiment, P. L. xii. 171- 

entlnon'd, P. L. ii.96l, v. 536; 

Com. 1 1. 
entice, II Pen/. 146 ; Co???. 940. 
entie'd. P.L. i. 412. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



enticement, Com. 525. 
enticing, P. L. ix. 996 ; S. A. 

559. 
entire, P.L. i. 146', 671, iii. 

265, v. 502, 753, vi. 399, 

741, ix. 292, x. 9, xii. 264. 
entirely, P. L. vii. 549; Od. 

Cir. 22. 
entitle, P. L. xi. 170. 
entrails, P. L. i. 234, ii. 783, 

vi. 346, 517, 588, ix. 1000, 

xii. 77 ; S.A. 614. * 
entrance, P.L. iii. 50, iv. 180, 

546, 882, ix. 6l, 68, 734, 

x. 21, xi. 119, 470 ; Com. 

518; Son. ix. 14. 
entranc'd, Com. 1005. 
entreat, Pf. lxxxviii. 39 '. 
entwin'd, P. L. iv. 174. 
entwining, P.L. x. 512. 
envenom'd, P. L. ii. 543. 
envermeil, Orf. D. F. I. 6. 
envied, P. L. ii. 244, vi. 813 ; 

S. A. 551; Fore, of Con. 4. 
envier, P. L. vi. 89. 
envies, P. L. vi. 900, ix. 770 j 

S. A. 995. 
envieft, P. L. viii. 494. 
envious, P. L. iv. 524, vii. 139, 

xi. 15 ; Com. 194. 
environ'd, P.L. ii. 1016; P.£. 

i. 194, iv. 423. 
environs, P. L. ix. 636 ; Son. 

xii. 3. 
envy, P. L. i. 35, 260, ii. 26, 

27, iii. 553, iv. 115, 503, 

517, v. 61, 662, vi. 79^, ix. 

175, 264, 466, 729, 805, xi. 

456 ; P. R. i. 38, 397 ; Arc. 

13 ; Son. xiii. 6, xv. 2. 
envying, P. L. ix. 254, 593, 
enwrap, Od. Nat. 134. 
Ephraim, S. A. 282, 988, 
Ephraim's, Pf. lxxx. 9. 
epicicle, P.L. viii. 84. 
Epicurean, P. JR. iv. 280. 
Epidaurus, P. L. ix. 5o7 
•pilepfies, P. X, xi. 483. 



Epirot, Son. xviii. 4. 

epithets, P.P. iv. 343, 480, 621. 

equal, P. L. i. 88, 91, 292, 6'54, 
ii. 47, 67, 200, 4/9, iii- 306* r 
iv. 526, 916, v. 726,797,820, 
832, 835, 866, vi. 49, 343, 
441, 6'90, viii. 6,228, 407, ix. 
286, 881, 882, x. 147, 271, 
680, 748; P. R. ii. 146, iii. 
99, 306, iv. 29, 303, 324; 
Com. 410; Pf. lxxxii. 12. 
more equal, P. L. ix. 823. 
no equal, P. £. vi. 248. 
not equal, P. X. iv. 296, v. 

791. 

equall'd, P. L. i. 40, 248, 4S8, 
719, iii. 33, 34. 

equality, P. L. v. 763, vii, 487, 
xii. 26. 

equally, P. L. iii. 306, iv. 68, 
v. 97, 792, xi. 362. 

equals, P.L. i. 249, v. 796, 
820, 832. 

equator, P. L. iii. 617. 

equinodlial, P. £. ii. 637, ix. 
6'4, x. 672. 

equipage. P. L. vii. 203 ; P. it 
iii. 304 ; Sow. xvii. 9* 

equivalent, P. L. ix. 609 ; S. A, 
343. 

Ercoco, P. L. xi. 398. 

ere, P. L. i. 334, ii. 409, iii. 
646, iv. 10, 623, v. 133, 685, 
699, 700, 871, vi. 108, 278, 
492, 521, 659, vii. 108, 304, 
335, viii. 112, 204, 242, 246, 
444, ix. 674, 931, x. 53, 229, 
846, 987, IO69, xi. 29, 356, 
769, xii. 51, 421; P. R. i. 
98, 158, 209, iii. 32, 196, iv. 
236; S.A. 177, 784, 825, 
846,1578; Lye. 8, 25; UAL 
107; Com. 56, 138,194,548, 
558, 573 ; Son. i. 9, xix. 2 ; 
Pf. lxxxviii. 54. 

ere long, P. L. i. 651 ; iv. 113, 
ix. 172, 246, 5&8, xi. 626, 
627; S.A. 468; Com. 151, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



562; Od.Pof. 10; Od.Cir. 

26 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 26 ; Pf 

lxxxv. 39. 
ere now, P. X. ii. 631 ; Pf. 

iii. 20. 
ere then, P. X. iv*. 97 1. 
ere this, P. L. x. 240. 
ere while, P. X. i. 281, vi. 334, 

610, x. 106, xii. 275; P. R. 

i. 1 ; S.A. 1442, 1702; Com. 

317; Od. Pafs. 1. 
ere yet, P. X. x. 584. 
Erebus, P. X. ii. 883 5 Cow. 

804. 
erec^, P. X. ii. 986, iv. 288, 

289, v. 725, 785, vii. 508, 

viii. 432, ix. 353, 501, xi. 

509 ; S. A. 1639. 
ereded, P. X. i. 6'79 ; P. R> iii. 

27. 
eremite, P. R. i. 8. 
eremites, P. X. iii. 474. 
err, P. X. ii. 347, v. 799, vi. 

148, 288, viii. 121, ix. 1049, 

x. 266; P.P. iii. 71 ; S.J. 

369 ; Co???. 223 ; Pf. lxxxv. 

56. 
errand, P. L. ii. 827, iv. 795, 

x. 4,1; S.J. 1285; Cow. 15, 

508. 
errands, P. X. iii. 652, vii. 573. 
err'd, P. X. ix. 1178, xi. 208; 

S.A. 211. 
erring, P. X. i. 747, vi. 173 ; 

P.R. i. 224; Cow. 588. 
erroneous, P. X. >i. 146", vii. 20, 

x. 9d9> 
errour, P.L. iv. 239, ix. 1181 ; 
V. II. 11.474, iii. 212, iv. 235. 
err'it, P. /.. vi. 172. 
tilt, P, L. i. 860, ii. 470, vi. 
187, 308, ix. l(>3, 8?6, 1081, 
xi. 868 ; P. II. ii. ] L5; ft y/. 
f, 1513; 4rc, 9; Od. 
Cir. 2. 

eruption, V. L. i. 656", viii. 235. 
Eiymunth, Arc, 100. 



Erythraean, Pf. exxxvi. 46. 

Efau, P. X. iii. 512. 

efcape, P. X. ii. 444, x. 339. 

efcap'd, P. X. iii. 14, iv. 794-, 
824, vi. 448, xi. 777. 

Efhtaol, S. A. 181. 

efpied, P. X. iv. 477. 

efpoufed, P. X. iv. 710, v. 18 ; 
Son. xxiii. 1. 

effence, P. X. i. 425, ii. 215, 
iii. 6, ix. 166 ; Od. Cir. 7. 

effences, P.L. i. 138. 

evTential, P. X. ii. 97, v. 841. 

eftablihVd, P.L. ii. 23, xii. 245. 

eftate, P. X. xii. 351 ; S. A. 
170, 742;P/.lxxxii. 15. 

efteem, P. X. iv. 886, ix. 328, 
329; P*R- i. 235, ii. 447, 
iii. 29, iv. 160,207; IlPenf. 
17; Fore, of Con. 10. 

efteem'd, Com. 514, 634. 

Eftotiland, P. X. x. 686. 

eftrange, P/! lxxxviii. 33. 

eftrang'd, P. X. ix. 1132. 

eternal, P. X. i. 25, 70, 121, 
154, 155, 318, 610, ii. 46, 
98, 161,695, 896, iii. 2, 18, 
127 ,172, 349, 374, iv. 70, 
268,99^ v. 173, 246, 711, 
vi. 96, 227, 240, 385, 424, 
630, 865, 904, vii. 9, 96, 137, 
226, 517, 576, viii. 413, x. 
32, 68, 597, 816, xii. 314, 
551 ; P. R. i. 281 ; iv. 391 ; 
S.A. 964, 1717; Com. 596 t 
988, 1008 ; Od. Nat. 2. . 
eternity, P. X. ii. 148, 248, iii. 
5, v. 580, vii. 92, viii. 406, 
xii. 556; Com. 14; Od. on 
Time, 11. 
eternize, P. L. vi. 374, xi. 60. 
Etham, S. A. 253. 
ethereal, P. L. i. 45, 285, ii. 
139,311,601, 978, iii. 7,100, 
716, v. 267, 418, 499, 863, 
vi. 60, 330, vii. 244, 356, 
viii. 646, x, 27, xii. 577; 



VERBAL INDEX. 



P.R.i. l63, ii. 121, iii. 28; 

S. A. 549; Od. Paf. 1. 
ethereous, P. L. vi. 473. 
Ethiop, P. L. iv. 282 ; // Pen/. 

19. 

Ethiops', P/i lxxxvii. 15. 

Ethiopian, P. L. ii. 641. 

Etrurian. P. X. i. 303. 

evade, P. L. x. 1021 ; P. P. iv. 
308. 

evaded, P.L. vi. 596. 

evangelize, P. L. xii. 499 • 

evafion, P. L. ii. 411. 

evafions, P. X. x. 829; S. A. 
842. 

Euboick, P. L. ii. 546. 

Euclid, £0??. xxi. 7. 

Eve, P. L. i. 364, iv. 324, 409, 
440, 481, 610, 634, 660, 710, 
742, 800, v. 9, 38, 74, 93, 
303, 308, 321, 3/9, 387, 443, 
vii. 50, viii. 40, 172, ix. 204, 
227,270,291,319,376,404, 
422, 424, 438,456, 495, 517, 
528, 550, 568, 6l3, 631, 644, 
659, 785, 886, 889, 892, 920, 
921, 9^0, 1005, 1013, 1016, 
] 017, 1036, 1065, 1067,1 133, 
1143, 1164, x. 3, 109, 157, 
159, 332, 335, 551, 582, 
863, 909, 966, 1012, 1013, 
1097, xi. 136, 140,141,159, 
162, 181, 192, 193, 224, 226, 
265,287,367,476, 519, xii. 
594, 607,624; P.P. i. 51, 
54, 318, ii. 141,349, iv, 5, 
6, 180 ; Com. 843 ; So?i. i. 2. 

Eve, P. L. i. 743, iv. 185, ix. 
828, 911. x. 183. 

even, P. L. i. 349, iii. 42, 179, 
iv. 555, v. 202, 425, vi. 245, 
544, vii. 252, 274, 338, 435, 
550, viii. 165, ix. 582, x. 47, 
xi. 276, 348 ; P. R. ii. 268 ; 
II Pen/. 38 ; Com. 188, 202, 
557,591, 773; Son. vii. 10, 
xviii. 3 ; jEp. Hobf. II. 25 ; 



Pf. vi. 5, lxxxiv. 9, IS, 
lxxxvi. 47- 
evening, P. L. i. 289, ii- ^93, 
iv. 151,355, 543, 598, 647, 
654, 662, 79%, v. 376, 627, 
628, vii. 104,260,386,448, 
450, 582, viii. 519, ix. 278, 
1088, x. 95, xi. 588, xii. 629; 
S. A. 1692 ; Lye. 30 ; Arc, 
54 ; Com. 540. 
evening-itar, P. L. viii. 519, xi, 

588. 
evening's, P. L. v. 115. 
even-fong, II Pen/. 64. 
event, P. L. i. 118, 134, 624, 
ii. 82, iv. 716, v. 740, ix, 
334, 405, 984, x. 969, xi. 
593; S.A. 637, 1551,1756; 
Com. 411. 
events, P. L. iv. 1001 ; P. R. 
ii. 104 ; Com. 405 ; Vac.Ex. 70. 
ever, P. L. i. 160, 210, 228, 
630, ii. 153, 338,744, 914, 
iii. 366, 425, iv. 119, 322, 
436, v. 19, 446, 810, viii. 
649, ix. 1033, x. 71, xii. 563 ; 
P.Rr i. 324, iii. 240, iv. 22; 
S. A. 446, 904, 925, 1336, 
1 735, 1748 ; UAL 138 ; Com. 
212; Son. xv, 5; Pf. i. 5, 
v. 35, lxxxiii. 63, lxxxiv. 18, 
cxiv. 16, exxxvi. 4. 
for ever, P. L. i. 250, 330, 
608, ii. 182, 776, iii. 244, 
249, 318, 333, v. 6ll, vi. 
733, vii. 586, viii. 479, x. 
637, xi. 95, 96, xii. 324, 
429; Lye. 181 ; Son. xiv. 
8; Od. on Time, 21; P/I 
lxxxiii. 15, 68, lxxxv. 17. 
ever-during, P. L. iii. 45, vii. 

206. 
ever-failing, S. A. 348. 
everlafting, P. L. ii. 184, 232, 
iii. 395, vii. 565 ; 0</. Nat. 
13 ; Orf. ora Time, 14 ; P/. 
lxxxvi. 35. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



everlastingly, Od. So/. Muf. \6. 

•verm ore, Ep. M. Win. 50; Pf. 
lxxxvi. 44. 

every, P. L. i. 356, ii. 877, iii. 
iii. 638, v. 8, 194, 410, 747, 
8l6, vi. 345, 848, vii. 317, 
336, 357, 3Q4, 523, 534, 6*21, 
viii. 321, 489, »x. 84, 160, 
310,459,521,721, xi. 324, 
337, 734, xii. 522 ; S. A. 
204 ; Lye. 93 ; VAl. 67; Arc. 
59 ; Com. 19, 524. 

eves, LAI. 130. 

evidence, P. L. ix. 962, x. 36l. 

evident, P. L. ix. 1077. 

evil, P. L. i. 163, 165, 216, 
335, 339, ii. 26l, 562, 623, 
iii. 683, iv. 110, 563, 896, v. 
98,99, 117, 207, 871, vi. 275, 
276, 289, 395, 437, 455, vii. 
25, 26,56,188,543,615, ix. 
464,697,698,709,723,752, 
774, 864, 1072, 1078, 1180, 
1185, x. 125,734, 849, 9^3, 
xi. 85,87,89,373,765,772, 
774, xi. 47,470,471, 566; 
P. R. ii. 371, iii. 218, 704, 
736,1523,1538, 1567; Arc. 
50; Com. 433, 593 ; Pf.v. 11. 

evil hour, P. L. ix. 780, 1067. 

Evil one, P. L. ix. 46*3 ; P. R. 
iv. 194. 

evil fpiiit, P. L. ix. 638. 

evils, P. L. ii. 281, vi. 46*3, ix. 
1079, x. 978, 1080, xii. 604 ; 
S. A. 105, 1.94, 374, 648, 
116*9; Com. 360. 

evince, P. L. xii. 287. 

evine'd, P. jR. iv. 235. 

euphrafy, P. L. xi. 414. 

Euphrates, P. L. i. 420, xii. 
114; P.P. iii. 272, 384. 

Euphrofyne, VAl. 12. 

Europe, P.L. iii. 310, xi. 405 ; 
Son. xxii. 12. 

En rotas', Od.D. P. I. 25. 

Eurus, P. />. x. 705. 

Eurydice, LVi/. 150. 



Eurynome, P. L. x. 581. 
ewe, P. L. ix. 582 ; P. P. i. 

315; Com. 503. 
ewes, P. L. xi. 649 ; Pf. cxiv. 

12. 
exact, P. L. vii. 477, viii. y39, 

ix. 1017, xii. 402 ; S.A. 507, 

788 ; Son. xix. 7. 
exactly, P. L. viii. 451. 
exacts, P. L. xii. 590; P. i?, 

iii. 120. 
exalt, P.L. iii. 313, iv. 525, 

v. 829, vii. 150; P/*lxxxiii.8. 
exaltation, P. L. v. 90, vi. 727 ; 

P. R. ii. 92. 
exalted, P. L. i. 736, ii. 5, y\ f 

99, ix. 150, xii. 457; P. it 

i. 36, ii. 46, 206. 
exalter, P/^ iii. 9« 
example, P. L. iv. 8S1, v. 901, 

vi. 910, vii. 42, ix. 962, x. 

840, xi. 809, xii.. 572; P. P. 

i. 232; S.A. 166,765,822. 
examples, S. A. 290. 
exafperate, P. L. ii. 143 ; S. Jk 

625, 1417. 
exceed, S. A. 8 17. 
exceeded, P. L. v. 459* 
exceeding, P. L. ix. 961 ; Od. 

Cir. 15. 
excel, P. L. iii. 133, viii. 542; 

P.P. iii. 307; S.A.74>. 
excell'd, P. L. ii. 884, iv. 490, 

ix. 897, x. 150 ; S.A. 523. 
excellence, P.L.ii.350, v. 456, 

vi. 637,821, viii. 91, x. 1017 ; 

Vac. Ex. 79- 
excellent, P. L. viii. 566, x. 

1015; P.P. i. 381. 
excelling, P.L. i. 359; P- R- 

iv. 347. 
excels, P. L. ii. 124, 125, vi. 

177, 822, viii. 456 ;Com. 63. 
except, P.L. ii. 300,678,1032, 

iii. 6*84, ix. 545, x. 6*80, xu 

808; P. R. iv. 85. 
excepted, P. L. xi. 426. 
exception, P. R. iii. 119. 



VERBAL INDEX 



excefs, P. X. i. 123, 593, iii. 

696, 698, v. 640, ix. 648, xi. 

Ill, 498; Com. 771; Od. 

Cir. 24. 
exceffive, P. X. ii. 779, "*• 380, 

vi. 463. 
excite, P. X. ii. 567, iv. 522. 
excites, P. X. ii. 484, vii. 68, 

ix. 264, 472 ; P. R. i. 397, 

423, iii. 26. 
exclaim'd, P. X. x. 4l6. 
exclude, P. X. iii. 202; iv. 584. 
excluded, P. X. iv. 105; P. H. 

i. 367; S.4. 494. 
exclufion, P. X. iii. 525. 
exclusive, P. L. viii. 625. 
excurfion, P. X. ii. 396, viii. 

231. 
excuse, P. X. v. 447, ix. 853, 

x. 764, xii. 96; S. A. 829, 

J831 ; Xj/c. 18. 

without excufe, S. A. 734. 
excus'd, P. X. iv. 39*. 
execrable, P. X. ii. 681, xii. 

64 ; S. A. 1362. 
execration, P. X. x. 737. 
execute, P. X. i. 430, ii. 732, 

iii. 399, x. 772. 
executes, S. A. 1284. 
execution, P. X. x. 853 ; S. A, 

506. 
exempt, P. X. ii. 318, iii, 370, 

ix. 486, x. 1025, xi. 514, 

709; S.A. 103, 310,918. 

no exemption, P. R. iii. 115. 
exempts, Son. xiii. 5. 
exercise, P. X. ii. 89, x. 400, 

796, 927 ; 5. ^. 612, 1287. 
exercis'd, P. X. iv. 551. 
exhalation, P. X. i. 711, xi.741. 
exhalations, P. X. v. 185, 425. 
exhale, P. X. v. 421. 
exhaFd, P. X. v. 642, ix. 1049. 
exhaling, P. X. vii. 255. 
exhaufled, P. X. vi. 852 ; P. #. 

iv. 136. 
exhilarating, P. X. ix. 1047. 
exhorting, P. X. ii. if9, 



exile, P. X. 1.632, ii. 207, x. 

484. 
exil'd, P. X. iv. 106 ; $. A. 98, 
exorbitant, P. X. iii. 177* 
expanded, P. X. i. 225. 
expanse, P. X. ii. 1014, iv. 456, 

vii. 264, 340. 
expatiate, P. X. i. 774. 
exped, P. X. iv. 972, v. 892, 

vi. 186, ix.382, xi. 226, 359, 

xii. 384, 591 ; S. A. 1352, 

1422 ; Lye. 84. 
expectance, Vac. Ex. 54. 
expectation, P, X. ii. 417, vi. 

306, ix. 789, x. 536, 782, xii, 

378; P. R. ii. 42, iii. 207. 
expe&ed, P. X, v. 811, ix. 281, 

x. 1048. 
expeding, P. X. x. 439, 504 ; 

P. R. iii. 192. 
expedite, P. X. x, 474. 
expedition, P. X. ii. 342, vi, 

86, vii. 193 ; P. R. i. 101 ; 

S. A. 1283. 
expel, P.X. ii. 140; P. R. iv. 

100, 127, 129. 

expell'd, P. X. ii. 195, 983, 

viii. 332. 
experience, P. X. i. 118, v. 

826, viii. 190, ix. 807, 988 ; 

P,R. ill 238; S. A. 188, 

382, 1756; IlPenf. 173. 
experiene'd, P. X. i. 56s. 
experiment, P. X. x. 967. 
expert, P. X. v. 233 ; P. #. ii. 

158; S.A. 1044. 
expiate, P. X, iii. 207; 5. 4* 

490, 736. 
expiations, P. X. xii. 291. 
expire, P.X.ii.93; Pf. lxxxviii, 

62. 
expired, P.R. iv. 174,395,568. 
explain, S. A. 1583. 
explain'd, P. X. ii. 518. 
exploded, P. X. xi. 669. 
exploding, P. X. x. 546. 
exploit, P. X. ii. Ill, iii. 465» 

x.407;P.£. i. 102, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



exploits, P. L. v. 565, xi. 790; 

5.^.32, 525, 1492. 
explore, P. L. ii. 971, vii. 95. 
explores, P. L. ii. 632, vi. 1 13. 
expofe, P. L. ii. 828, x. 130, 

xii. 339; PR. i. 142. 
expos'd, P. L. i. 505, ii. 360, 

iii. 425, iv. 206, ix. 341, x. 

407, 9-57 ; P. P. ii. 204, iv. 

140; S.A.75. 
expofes, P. L. ii. 27; S. A. 

919* 
exprefs, P. L. ii. 480, iii. 3, v. 

574, vii. 528, viii. 6l6, x. 

926, xi. 354; P. P. i. 233, 

ii. 332 ; Com. 69. 
exprefs'd, P. L. iii. 140, vi. 

720, ix. 554, 1 164, x. 67 f xi. 

597; P.P. iv. 351. 
expreffing, P. L. viii. 440, 544, 

P. P. iv. 601. 
expreflion, P. L. iii. 591, ix. 

527- 
exprefsly, P. L. ix. 356, P. P. 

ii. 3. 
expreft, Arc. 12. 
expulfion, P. L. vi. 880; P. P. 

ii. 128. 
expung'd, P. L. iii. 49- 
exquifiteft, P. R. ii. 346. 
extend, P. X. ii. 326, 493, v. 

651, vii. 230, x. 804; P. P. 

iii. 65, iv. 223; Pf. lxxxv. 

19. 
extended, P. L. i. 195, ii. 885, 

1047, iii. 557. 
extends, P. L. ix. 108, xii. 

211. 
extent, P. L. vii. 496, x. 808 ; 

P. P. 406. 
extenuate, P. L. x. 645; S. A. 

767. 
exteriour, P. L. ix. 336, i 
external, P. L. v. 103. 
extinct, P. L. i. 141, ix. 829; 

8. A. 70. 
extin»uifh, V. L. iv. 666. 
extinguiih'cl, 6'. //. 10*88. 



extol, P. L. ii. 479, iii. 146, 
iv. 436, 733, v. 164 ; P. P. 
ii. 453, iii. 50. 

extolld, P. L. iii. 398; P, R. 
iii. 54. 

extolling, S. A. 654. 

extoll'ft, P. P. iv. 353. 

extort, P. L. i. 111. 

extorts, P.P. i.423. 

extracted, P. L. viii. 497. 

extracting, P. L. v. 25. 

extraordinary, S. A. 1383. 

extravagant, P. L. vi. 616. 

extreme, S. A. 1342; C<wi. 
273. 

extremes, P. L. i. 276, ii. 599, 
vii. 272, x. 976. 

extremity, Com. 643. 

exulcerate, S. A. 625. 

eye, P. L. i. 568, 604, ii. 189, 
748, iii. 58, 193, 534, 547, 
573,578,614, 660, iv. 117, 
125, 279, 300, 572, v. 26, 
131, 171, 711, vi. 149,350, 
476, 848, viii. 307, 488, ix. 
397,518,528,743,777,923, 
1036, x. 5, xi. 191,212,385, 
396, 620, xii. 556; P. P. 
i. 319, ii. 153, 210, iii. 293, 
iv. 61, 112, 216, 240, 507; 
S. A. 94, 459, 636, 690, 
1172, 1625 ; LAI. 69; II 
Pen/. 140, 141; Com. 155, 
164, 329, 978; Son. i. 5. 
vii. 14; Od. Pafs. 43 ; Pf. vi. 
13, lxxxviii. 38, exxxvi. 78, 
94. 

eyelefs, S. A. 41. 

eye-lids, P. L. iv. 6l6, v. 674; 
Lijc. 26; II Pen/. 150. 

eye-(i«ht, S. A. 919, 1489, 
1502, 1503, 1527- 

eye-witneffes, P. L. vi. 883. 

ey'd, P. L. iv. 504, xi. 585. 

eyes, P. L. i. 56, 193, 456, ii. 
239, 388, 616, 753, 803, 890, 
iii. 23, 53, 382, 650, 700, vi. 
358, 466, 492, 658, v. 44, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



647, vi. 571, 755, 846, 847, 
vii. 67, 446, 496, 513, viii, 
63, 257, 310, 459, ix. 500, 
706, 866, 875, 985, 1014, 
1053, 1070, 1122, x. 553, 
xi. 130, 305, 367, 412, 419, 
423, 429, 478, 585, 598, 
711, 863, xii. 109, 274; 
P. R. ii. 31, 180, 338, iii. 
245, 390, iv. 38 ; S. A. 33, 
124, 584, 726, 1103, 1160, 
1490, 1543, 1637, 1744; 
Lye. 81, 139, 181; L'Al. 
SO, 121; II Pen/. 40, 166; 
Are. 27; Com. 342, 395, 
753, 758; Od. PaJ. 16 ; Pf. 
lxxxvi. 51, lxxxviii. 44. 

<eyn, Od. Nat. 223. 

eyries, P. L. vii. 424. 

Ezekiel, P. L. i. 455. 



fable, P. L. i. 580; P. R. iv. 

341 ; Lye. 160. 
fabled, P. .L.i. 741, ix. 30, x. 

580; P.R. ii. 358. 
fables, P. L. i. 197, ii. 627, iv. 

250, xj. 11; P.R. ii. 210; 

Com. 800. 
fableft, P. L. vi. 292. 
fabling, P. R. iv. 295. 
fabrick, P. L. i. 710, viii. 76, 

x. 482. 
Fabricius, P. R. ii. 446. 
fabulous, Com. 513. 
face, P. L. i. 600, ii. 304, 490, 

iii. 44, 140, 262, 407, 637, 

iv. 114, v. 30, 43, 644, vi. 

540, 681, 721, 783, vii. 278, 

316, 377, 636, ix. 853, 

1063, 1080, x. 205, 723, 

1064,xi. 316, 353, 712, 843 ; 

P. R. iii. 324, iv. 430, S. A. 

742; Cam. 530; Son. xxiii. 
10, 12; Od.D. F. I. 34; Pf. 

Ixxx. 15, 3.1, 79? lxxxiii. 



60, lxxxiv. 31, lxxxvi. 57, 
lxxxviii. 58. 
faces, P. L. vi. 753, ix. 1077, 

xi. 128, 641, xii. 644. 
facile, P. L. iv. 967, viii. 65, 

ix. 1158; P.P. i. 51. 
faft, P. L. ii. 124, ix. 928, 980, 

xi.457; S. A. 493, 736. 
faaion, P.L. ii. 32,901. 
factious, P. L. xi. 664, xii. 352» 
faculty, P. L. v. 410. 
faculties, P.L. v. 101, viii. 542 ; 

Com. 628. 
fade, P.L. iii. 360. 
faded, P.L. i. 602, ii. 375, 3/6, 

iv. 870, ix. 893. 
fading, Od. D. F. I. 2. 
faeries, Com. 118. 
faery, P. L. i. 781 ; P. R. Ii. 
359 ; L'AL 102 ; Cow. 298, 
436; Vac. Ex.60. 
fail, P. L. i. 117, 167, 633, ii. 
205, vi. 117, vii. 38, ix. 942, 
1142, x. 856, xii. 9; P.P. 
ii.54, iii. 395; L'Al. 99 ; H 
Penf. 155; Com. 597; Od. 
Nat. 171 ; Pf lxxxi. 27. 
fail'd, P.L. ii.480, iii. 101, iv. 
357, vii. 139, viii. 534, ix. 
145 ; P. P. i. 147, iv. 6l2 ; 
Ep. Hobf. I. 10. 
failing, P. L. ii. 931. ix. 404, 

x. 129. 
fails, P.L. vi. 117, viii. 38. 
fain, S.A. 1535; Com. 783 ; Pf 

lxxxi. 6l. 
faint, P. L. vi. 392, 799, *i. 
108, 631 ; Com. 331 ; Sow. 
xxiii. 4 ; P/*. cxiv. 10. 
fainted, Ep. Hobf II. 16. 
fainting, P. L. i. 530 ; S. A. 

666. 
faintings, S.A. 631. 
fair, P. L. i. 445, 468, ii. 398 f 
650, 748, 757, 818, iii. 47, 
338, 554,694, 727, iv. 151, 
268, 300, 339, 379, 468, 477, 
478,481,491,521,610,648, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



718,742,770, 790, 820, v. 
52, 58, 74, 124, 129, 155, 
380, vi. 524, 6ll, vii. 556, 
viii. 47, 172,221, 273, 276, 
338,471,472,493, 568, 596, 
ix. 354, 443, 452, 489, 538, 
545, 568, 585, 605, 6*06', 60S, 
661,720,731,763,777,798, 
972, 1159, x. 352, 384, 56l, 
618,769,818,891,943,1067, 
xi. 57, 582, 593, 614, 625, 
630,647, 7 17, xii. 26; P. R. 
i. 63, 381, ii. 155, 301, iii. 
257, 351, iv. 55, 426, 442, 
451, 544; S. A. 217, 533, 
688, 728, 934, 106*2, 1178, 
1723 ; Lye. 73 ; Arc. 33, 45 ; 
UAL 11, 23 ; Com. 34, 152, 
160,283,393,442,831,859, 
959,969, 981,1009;Orf.JVfl/. 
37 ;0d.Pafl6;0d. D.F.I. 
11, 21 ; Ep.M. Win. 4; Of/. 
Sol. Muf 21 ; Frtc. Ex. 28 ; 
Orf. iior. 13; Pf vi. 19, 
lxxxiv. 1, Ixxxvii. 5, 6. 

lair-enticing, P. P. ix. 996. 

fairer, P. P. ii. 110, iv. 270, ix. 
1032; P.R. ii. 352, 358, iv. 
613; S.A.217. 
much fairer, P. L. v. 53. 

faireft, P. P. iv. 147, 324, v. 18, 
166,381, viii. 307, 493, ix. 
432, 538, 511, 851, 896, xi. 
549; P. it. ii- 154, iii. 341 ; 
Od.D.F,I. 1. 

Fairfax, Son. xv. 1. 

fairly, P.P. iv. 187; Cow. 1 68, 

faith, P. L. ii. 36, 69O, iii. 104. 
iv. 520, 954, vi. 115, 143, 
viii, 325, ix. 286, 298, 320, 
335,411,1075, 1141, x. 129, 
xi. 64, 141, 458, 807, xii. 
128,154,295,306,409,427, 
449,488,527,528,529,536, 
582, 599, 603 ; S. A. 388, 
750, 986; CW. 88, 213, 971; 
Son. xiv. 1, l,9>*v. 12, xvi. 
3 i Pore. of Con. 9 i Od. Uor. 6. 



faithful, P. L. i.264, 611, iv. 
933, 950, 952, v. 896, 897, 
vi. 204, 371, 803, ix. 265, 
983, xi. 64, xii. 113, 152, 
462, 481, 571; S.A.951, 
1498, 1751; Lye. 121; Com. 
944 ; Pf. cxiv. 1, exxxvi. 4, 

faithfulnefs, P. L. iv. 951 ; Pf. 

lxxxviii. 48. 
faithlefs, P. L. iii. 96, v. 891; 

S. A. 380. 
Falerne, P.P. iv. 11 7. 
fall, P.L. i. 16, 642, ii. 1 6, 76, 

177, 203, 549, 773, iii. 95, 

99, 128, 152, 201, 237, 619, 

iv. 91, 101,260, v. 130, 241, 

540, 542, 878, vi. 55, 285, 

796, 872, 898, vii. 19, viii. 

640, ix. 362,941, IO69, x. 

16, 44, 184, 451, 1087, xi. 

500, xii. 118,391 ; P.P. i. 

373, ii. 88, 223, iii. 201, iv. 

380, 561, 571, 620; S.A. 55; 

Com. 251, 491 ; Od. Paff\ 49 ; 

Od.D.F. 1.4*4; Ep.M. Win. 

45 ; Pf. 1. 9, v. 29, vii. 60, 

lxxxii. 23. 
fall clown, P. R. iv. 166, 192, 
fall off, P. L. i.30; S.A. 456. 
fall out, S. A. 1265. 
fall (hort, P.L. ix. 174. 
fallacious, P. L. ii. 568, ix. 

1046; P.P. iii. 4; <S. ,4. 320, 

533. 
fallacy, P. P. i. 155. 
fallen, P. L. i. 84, 92, 157, 282, 

330, ii. 13, 457, iii. 181,400, 

iv. 591, v. 240, 541, vi. 24, 

852, vii. 25, 26, x. 47, 62, 

xi. 29, 180; P. R. i. 405; 

S.A. 169,414, 1523, 1558, 

1559, 1643. 
fall'ft, P. L. v. 174. 
fallible, P. L. vi. 428. 
falling, P. L. i. 174, 745, ii. 

925, 935, iv. 615, v, 190,191* 
x. 663 j Com. 30, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fallows, UAL 71. 
falls, P> X. iii. 130, iv. 731, v. 
6l3, viii.551;P. it. iv.TO; 
S.A.690. 
falfe, P. X. ii. 112, 522, 565, 
700, iii. 92, 681, v. 694-, 809, 
898, vi. 121, 271, ix. 306, 
333, 355, 1011, 1068, 1070, 
x. 452, 868, xi. 413, xii. 122 ; 
P.il. ii. 179, iii- 69, iv 291, 
320, 491 ; S. A. 227, 749, 
824, 901 ; Lye. 153; Com. 
156,364,690,759,799,814; 
Son. xi, 7 ; Od. on Time, 5 ; 
Pf iv. 12, lxxxii. 6. 
&lfhood, P. X. iv. 122, 811, x. 
873, iii. 443 ;S. A. 955, 979; 
Com. 281, 698. 
falfe -imagin'd, Od. D. F. I. 72. 
falfities, P. X. i. 367- 
faltering, P. X. ii. 989, ix. 846, 

x. 115; Pf. v. 25. 

feme, P. X. i. 651, 695, ii. 346, 

iii. 449, iv. 938, vi. 240, 375, 

384, x. 481, xi. 386, 623, 

698, 699, 793, xii. 47; P. -K. 

i. 334, ii. 209, iii. 25, 47, 70, 

100, 101, 289, iv. 371 ; S. A. 

970, 1248, 1706, 1717 ; Lye. 

70, 78, 84; Arc. 8, 41 ; Son. 

viii. 6 ; xiii. 12 ; Ep. W. Sh. 5. 

fem'd, P. L. iii. 568, xii. 332 ; 

P. R. i. 34, iv. 59 ; S. A. 

1094. 

fcimiliar, P. L. ii. 219, 76l, ix. 

2, xi. 305. 
family, P. L.x. 216; P. R. iii. 

168. 
families, P. X. xii. 23. 
famine, P. L. ii. 847, x. 573, 
597, xi. 472, 778 ; P. jR. ii. 
257. 
famiih, P. L. xii. 78 • 
famifh'd, P. il. ii. 311. 
famous, P. X. iv. 234 ; P. JR. ii. 
7, iv. 221, 241,267; <$.^. 
145, 528, 542 ; ^rc. 28. 
femoufeft, S, A. 982. 



fan, P. X. v. 6, 269, x. 94. 
fanatick, P. X. i. 480. 
fancied, P. X. ix. 789- 
fancies, P. it. iv. 292 ; II Pen/. 6. 
fancy, P. X. iv. 802, v. 53, 102, 

110, 486, viii. 188, 294, 46l, 

ix. 1009; S.J. 601, 794; 

Com. 548, 669; Od. Nat. 

134; Od.Paf. 31; Vac. Ex, 

32 ; Ep. W. Sh. 13. 
Fancy's, L'Jl. 133. 
fann'd, P. X. v. 655, vii. 432 ; 

Pf. i. 11. 
fanning, P. X. iv. 157; Xj/c 

44. 
fans, P. X. vii. 476. 
fantafies, Com. 205. 
far, P. X. i. 507, 607, 79% ii. 

1, 97, 133, 791, 1036, iii. 

153, 154, 428, 501, 504, 621 r 

iv. 288,453, 545, v. 648, 744, 

757, vi. 79, 415, 551, 743, 

vii. 71, 145, 220, 272, viii. 

231, 359, 382, ix. 642, 772, 

1012, x. 150,233,423,593, 

xi. 783, xii. 45, 432, 464, 

465, 533, 587 ; Ep. M. Win. 

69 ; Vac. Ex. 70 ; Brut. 7 ; 

Pf. lxxxviii. 70. 

as far, P. X. i. 73, iv. 103, 
x. 686. 

as far as, P. X. i. 59, 138, ix. 
79; P. it. iii. 272. 
far abler, P. R. i. 151. 
far away, Lye. 155. 
far-beaming, Od. Nat. 9. 
far be it, P. X. iv. 758. 
far beneath, P. R. iv. 356. 
far beyond, S. J. 527. 
far different, P. it. iii, 89. 
far diftant, P. X. ix. 576. Se§ 

diftant. 
far-fet, P. R. ii. 401. 
far higher, P. R. iv. 521. 
far more, P. it. ii. 483. 
far and nigh, P. X. vi. 295 >- 

P. it. iv. 123. 
far other, P, it. ii. 132. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



by far, P. L. iii. 529, vii, 
359, viii. 598. 

from far, P. L. iii. 570, vi. 
487, x. 1077; P.R. iii. 
303; Od. Nat. 22; Od.D. 
F. I. 17. 
how far, P. L. v. 828, ix: 
615 ; S. A. 755 ; Son. xii. 
13. 
far lefs, P. i. ii. 659, viii. 33, 

ix. 3S1, xi. 874. 
far more, P. L. iii. 311. 

not far, P. X. i. 67 0, ii. 1007, 
iii. 88, vii. 6l8, viii. 481. 
far off, P. L. ii. 582, 636, 643, 
1047, iii. 422, 494, 559, iv. 
14, vi. 768, vii. 32, viii. 185, 
x. 104, 211, xi. 121, 333, 
727 ; P. P. iv. 547 ; Com. 
229,456, 481; 11 Pen/. 74. 
far other, P.L. x. 862, xi. 171; 

S.A. 875; Com. 6 12. 
far othenvife, P.L. vi. 398, viii. 

529, ix. 984. 
far remote, P. R. iv. 67. 
far renown'd, S. A. 341. 
far round, P. L. i. 666, ix. 482. 
far worfe, P. P. iv. 320. 
fo far, P. L. iii. 476,609, iv. 
446, v. 457, 458, vi. 342, 
vii. 369, viii. 102, 120, 156, 
ix. 433, x. 281; P. R. i. 
322, iv. 46 ; Od. Nat. 170. 
this far, P. R. iv. 7. 
thus far, P. L. See thus. 

P. A. ii. 49. 
too far, P.L. v. 213; P. P. 
iv. 87 ; Cam. 193. 
far and wide, P. L. ii. 519, 
1003, iii. 614, iv. 579, v. 
773 ; P. R. iii. 72. 
far WOrfe, Sec worfe. 
fare, P. L. v. 495, ix. 1028, x. 

735; P.P. ii. 202. 
fans, P.L. ii. 940, iv. 131 , 

P. R. iii. 443. 
farewell, P. L. i. 249, ii. 492, 
iv. 108, 109; S.A. 959. 



farms, P. L. ix. 448. 

fartheft, P. L. i. 247, ii. 103S, 
iv. 892, xi. 401 ; P. R. iv. 
69; Com. 227. 

fartheft-off, P. P. iii. 397. 

fafliion, Cow. 360. 

fafhion'd, P. L. viii. 469. 

faft, P. L. i. 12, ii.725,754,iv. 
171, 190, 796, vi. 543, viii. 
240, xi. 851, xii. 631 ; P.P. 
ii. 247, iv. 480; S.A. 637 r 
1432; II Pen/. 44, 46; Com. 
Sl6;0d. Nat. 21 1 ; Od. Pajf. 
21 ; Pf. vii. 37, lxxx. 38, 
lxxxvii. 2, 20. 

as faft, P. L, ii. 675, x. 542 r 
xii. 639. 

faft by, P.L. ii. 1051, iii. 354 ? 
iv. 221, vi. 5, ix. 628, x. 
333. 

faft-fleeping, P. L. ix. 182. 
too faft, P.L.vi. 870, x. 319. 

faften'd, P. L. x. 300; S. A. 
1398. 

fafting, P.P. ii. 243, 284. 

fat, P.L. xi.439, 648; -S.A 
1671. 

fatal, P. L. ii. 104, 712, 725, 
786,871,iv.349,514,v.S6l, 
ix. 889, x. 4, 191, 364, xii. 
99; P.P. i. 53, 441, iv. 205, 
525 ; #. A. 1024 ; Lye. 100 ; 
Son. x. 7; Od. D.F.I. 7. 

fate, P. L. i. 11 6, 133, 448, ii. 
17, 197,232,393,550,559, 
560, 610, 809, iii. 33, 113, 
120, v. 527, vi. 869, vii. l/3 y 
ix. 689, 885, x. 265,480, xi. 
181 ; P. P. iv. 26*5, 383, 317, 
4/0 ; Arc. 67 ; Od. Nat. 149 ; 
Od. D.F.I. 22; E V . M.Win. 
13; Ep.Hobf.\\.30. 

father, P. L. ii. 727, 743, 810, 
864, iii. 56, 139, 143, 144, 
154, 227, 262, 271, 372, 386, 
401, iv. 495,757, v.246, 403, 
596, 663, 735, 836, 847, 855, 
vi. 96 } 671, 720, 723, 814, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



UK), vii. 11, 137, 19^, 517, 

588, viii. 298, 498, x. 32, 63, 
66, 6S, 216, 1097, xi. 22, 45, 
760, xii. 103, 487, 546 ; P. R. 
i.l68, 175,236,486, ii. 414, 
iii. 110, 153, 154, 185, 282, 
iv. 596; £.^.355,3/3,448, 
4S7, 1248 ; II Pen/. 2 ; Com. 
57, 828 ; Son. x. 10, xx. 1 ; 
Od. Nat. 7. 
fatherlefs, Pf lxxxii. 9. 
fatherly, P. L. xii. 63. 
fathers, P. R. i. 351, iii. 379, 
439; 5. A. 667, l4$5',Son, 
xviii. 4. 
father's, P. L. ii. 730, iii. 393, 
398,415, vi. 710, x. 223, xi, 
20, xii. 121 ; P. R. i. 31, 93, 
283, ii. 85, 99, 259, iii- 175, 
219, iv. 552, 603; S.A. 447, 
602, 1432, 1459, 1506, 1717, 
1733 ; Com. 35, 493, 9*7- 
fathom, P. L. ii. 934. 
fault, P.L. i. 609, iii. 96, 118, 
x. 823, 938; 5.-4.241,431, 
502. 
faults, P. L. x. 1089, 1101, xii. 

337. 
faulty, P. L. xi. 509- 
Faun, P. .R. ii. 191. 
Fauns, Lye. 34. 
Faunus, P. L. iv. 708. 
Favonius, Son. xx. 6. 
favour, P. L. i. 654, iii. 664, 
vi. 462, 66l, vii. 72, viii. 202, 
ix. 334, x. 1096, xi. 153, xii. 
278, 622 ; P. R. ii. 430 ; 
S. A. 273, 1357, 1412 ; Com. 
184 ; Pf. iv. 30, v. 40, lxxxv. 
1, lxxxviii. 8. 
favourable, P. L. v. 507, xi. 

169; 5.^.921. 
favour'd, P. L. i. 30, ii. 350 ; 
P. R. ii. 68,91; 5. .4.1046; 
Com. 77. 
favouring, 5. ^. 3720; Pf. 
lxxxii, 7. 



favourite, P. X. ix. 175 ; P;R* 

iv. 95. 
favours, P. L. ix. 949; S. ^> 

685. 
fawn'd, P. L. iv. 959- 
fawning, P. L. ix. 526, 
fawns, P. L, iv. 404. 
fayes, Od. Nat. 255. 
fealty, P. L. iii. 204, viii. 344, 

ix. 262, 
fear, P. L. i. 558, 598, 788, ii, 
17,49,85,94,205,293,343, 
627, 783, iv. 108, 190, 574, 
822, 854, v. 98, 396, vi. 238, 
393, 394, 397, 490, 494, 539, 
912, viii. 168, 322, ix. 285, 
286, 326, 702, 773, 989, x. 
409, 780, 8] 3, 1000, 1024, 
1082. xi. 139,212,234,361, 
799, xii. 218, 305 562 ; P. R, 
i. 66, 69, 223, 422, 451, ii. 
47, 257, iii. 385, iv. 189, 
196, 454 ; S. A. 740, 1065, 
1234,1250, 1374, 1526 ; Com. 
327, 364, 405, 410, 412, 565. 
800 ; Vac. Ex. 67 ; Pf- ii. 23, 
iii. 17, v. 19, lxxxv, 37, 
lxxxvi. 39, 52. 
fear'd, P. L. i. 628, ii. 82, 470, 
v. 135, 905, ix. 331, 511, 
536, 1006, x. 51 ; P. R. iv. 
488 ; S. A. 79% 900, 939 f 
1719; Com. 446. 
no fear, P. R. iii. 2-06; Ii 

Penf. 30. 
without fear, P. R. iv. 617. 
not fear'd, P. L. ii. 678, ix. 
701, x. 119. 
fearing, P. L. x. 340, xii. 15 ; 

P. R. iv. 304. 
fearlefs, P. L. i. 131, ii. 855, 
iv. 14, v, 875, vi. 51, 804, ix. 
57, 187, x. 811; S. A. 529, 
810. 
fears, P. L. i. 275, 530, x. 842, 
J003;P.il.i. 110, ii. 53, 64, 
70, 467; S.A. 805, 1469; 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Com.355 i 511,5\2;Od.Nat. 

45 ; Vac. Ex. 27 ; Fore, of 

Ccn. 18. 
fear'it, P. L. ix. 282, x. 838. 
feaft, P. L. vi. 167, ix. 37, xi. 

592, 715, xii. 21 ; P. JR. i. 

210, iv. 637; S.A. 12,434, 

1194,1311,1448,1612,1656; 

Lye. 117; L'-4/. 127; Com. 

102, 479, 777; 5on. xx. 9; 

Ep. M. Win. 1 8 ; Vac. Ex. 49 ; 

Pf lxxxi. 12. 
feaftful, 5. A. 1741 ; So/*, ix. 12. 
feafts, P.L. i. 390, v. 467; 

P. it. iv. 114; Com. 7*6. 
feat, L'^/. 101. 
feather'd, P. L. v. 284, vii. 420, 

ix. 1117. 
feathers, Com. 378. 
feathery, Com. 347- 
feafts, P. L. ii. 537 ; S.A. 1083, 

1278, 1340, 1602. 
feature, P. L. x. 279. 
features, Com. 748. 
fed, P. L. i. 68, 728, ii. 843, 

iii. 435, iv* 240, v. 415, 467, 

viii. 256; P. R. i. 350, ii. 

110, 258, 313, iv. 593; Lye. 

24, 125. 
fee} Som x. 3, xii. 7- 
feeble, S. A. 455 ; Com. 1022 ; 

Otf. Pajj: 45. 
feed, P. L. ii. 863, iii. 37, v. 

417, ix. 597, 779, x. 604 ; 

P. ii. ii. 421; S. A. 1562; 

Com. 721 ; Pf. lxxxi. 6*5, 

exxxvi. 85. 
feeder, Com. 779. 
fecd'ft, P/.lxxx. 21. 
feeds, P. L. v. 416, vii. 490. 
feel, P. L. i. 153, 336, ii. 101, 

216, 340, 598, iii. 22,iv. 972, 

v.892, vi. 157, viii, 282, 6*08, 

.x. 120, 315, 680, 913, 955, 

983, 1009, x. 243, 811, xi. 

46*5, 775 ; P. Ii. i. 198,400, 

ii. 252 ; & A. 9, 594, 662, 



1155, 1381; Cow. 145, 800, 

feel'ft, P. L. x. 951 ; P. it. iv» 
621. 

feeling, P. L. x. 733 ; P. it. iii. 
208 ; S. A. 96. 

feels, Od. Nat. 221 ; Od.PaJf.338. 

feet, P. L. i. 238, ii. 404, 949, 
iii.31, 73, 4S6, i v. 183, 866, 
v. 283, vi. 592, vii. 440, viii. 
26*1,315, x. 190, 215,911, 
942, xi. 759 ; P. R> iii. 224, 
253, iv. 621; S. A.. Ill, 336, 
732,931,950; IlPenf.155; 
Com. 180, 310, 896 ; Od. Nat. 
25, 146. 

feign, P. R. i. 474. 

feign'd, P. i. ii. 627, iii- 639, 
iv. 96+ 706, v. 381* ix. 31, 
439, 492, xi. 799 ; P- R- ii- 
358 ; S. A. 752, 829, 871, 
1116. 

feign'dft, S.A. 1135. 

feigning, P. X. xii. 517; P. #• 
iv. 397. 

felicity, P. it. iv. 297 ; Ep. M. 
Win. 6S. 

fell,P.L.i. 75, 445,461, 491 * 
586, 679, 740, 743, 748, ii. 
539,771, 826, 1006, 1023, 
iii. 102, 129, iv. 39, 6*4, 230, 
231, 905, v. 133, 434, vi. 190, 
593, 614, 844, 871, 912, vii. 
134, viii. 315, 458, x. 513, 
539, 542, 570, 906, 912,1 099> 
xi.446; P.R. i. 443, ii. 134, 
150, iii. 332, iv. 295, 310, 
415, 568, 571, 581 ; S.A. 
144, 532, 1580, 1582 ; Com. 
50, 53, 559; Pf ii. 10, 
lxxxiii. 7, exxxvi. 40. 

fell afleep, P. L. v. 92, xii. 614. 

fell off, P. JR. iii. 415. 

fell'd, P. L. vi. 250, 575 ; S. A. 
263. 

fellow-fcrvant, P. L. viii. 225. 

fellows, P. L. i. 606, ii. 428, 
Vi. 160 ; Com, 485. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



feilowfhip, P. L. viii. 389, 442, 

xi. 80; P. R. i. 401. 
felon, Lye. 91. 

arch-felon, PL. iv. 179- 
felonious, Com. 196. 
felt, P. _L. i. 227, ii. 11, 543, 

780, iv. 847, vi. 872, viii. 

530, ix. 782, 846, 859, x, 

36l, 362, 511, 541, 717. 

1098 ; P.P. i. 89, 308, 1006; 

S. A. 1257, 1636. 
female, P. L. vii. 490, 530, viii. 

150, ix. 822, 999, x. 897 ; 

P. P. i. 151, ii. 219; S. A. 

711, HI, 1055, 1060. 
female troop, P. L. xi. 614. 
feminine, P. L. i. 423, ix. 458, 

x.893; S.A. 403. 
fen, Com. 433. 
fence, P. L. iv. 187; 5. ^. 937 ; 

Com. 791 ; P/ Ixxx. 50. 
fene'd, P. L. iv. 697, ix. 1119. 
fencelefs, P. L. x. 303. 
fenel, P. L. ix. 581. 
fens, P. L. ii. 621, vii. 417- 
ferment, S. A. 619. 
fermented, P. L. vii. 281. 
ferry, P. L. ii. 604. 
fertile, P. L. i. 468, iv. 216, 

645, v. 319, vii. 454, ix. S01; 

P. ii. iii. 259. 
fertility, Com. 729- 
fervent, P. L. v. 849. 
fervently, P. L. ix. 342; P. P. 

iii. 121. 
fervid, P. L. v. 301, vii. 224. 
Fefole, P. L. i. 289- 
teller, 5. .4.621. 
fefter'd, S. A. 186. 
feftival, 5. A. 1598 ; Ori. JVa*. 

147- 
teftivals, P. i. vi. 94, xi. 723 ; 

S. A. 983 ; Com. 848. 
fetch, P. £. viii. 137 ; S. A. 

921, 1731 ; Com. 708; ^rc. 

54; Od.Nat, 135. 
fetch'd, P. P. iv. 589; Ep. 

Hob/. II. 18, 



fetter'd, S. A. Il60, 1235 ; Od. 

Nat. 234. 
fetters, S. A. 35 ; Com. 8I9. 
fever i(h, Cow. 8. 
feverous, P. L. xi. 482. 
few, P. L. iii. 496, vi. 148, vii. 

31, x. 157, xi. Ill, xii. 13, 

480; P.R. iii. 20, 59, 234; 

S. A. 1400; Cow. 391, 771; 

Son. ix. 3, xvii. 11. 
Fez, P. L. xi. 403. 
fickle, P. L. ii. 233, ix. 948 ; 

S.^. 164; II Pen/ 10. 
fie, Fac. Ex. 53. 
field, P. L. i. 105, 611, 163, ii. 

292, iii. 430, 513, iv. 186, 

245, 265, 268, 980, v. 20, 

136, 292, vi. 309, 410, vii. 

19, 322, 335, 358, 495, 522, 

ix. 86, 417, 520, 560, 575, 

x. 176, 204, 275, 533, xi. 

171,215,429,654; P.R. i. 

9, 318, iii. 73, 268, 326, iv. 

505; S. -4. 1087, 1094; Son. 

xvi. 8 ; P/ viii. 20, 
fields, P. L. i. 249, 520, ii. 493, 

530, 768, iii. 460, 569, 606, 

vii. 460, viii. 145, 301; P.P. 

i. 243; Com. 60, 919; Son. 

xviii. 11, xx. 2; Od. D.F.I. 

40; P/ cxiv. 3. 
fiend, P.L.i. 283, ii. 643, 671, 

815, 917,947, iii. 430, 440, 

498, 524, 588, iv. 166, 285, 
393, 819, 857, 924, 1005, 
1013, ix. 412, x. 20, 233, xi. 
101 ; P. R. i. 465, ii. 323, 
iii. 345, 441, iv. 194, 430, 

499, 576; UAL 110. 
arch-fiend, P.L.i. 156, 209. 

fiends, P. L. iv. 953. 

fierce, P. L. i. 100, 305, 336, 
667, ii. 78, 219, 580, 599, 
6l\, 898, iii. 399, iv. 128> 
509, 871, vi.93, 201, 220, 
356, 610, 765, 194>, 829, vii. 
272, ix. 462, 471, x. 556, 
703, 709, 739, 865, xi. 483, 



VOL. I. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

641, xii. 631 ; P. R. i. 90, 284, 843, 847, in. 135, 348y 

312, iv. 269,412 ; S. A. 6'12, 447, iv. 351, 827, v. 280, vi. 

952, 985 ; Com. 426*, 6'54 ; 200, vii. 51, 257, x. 5?0. xi 

6'ob. xvii. 4 ;P/ ii. ll,lxxxvi. 77, 888 ; P. ft. ii. 77 ; & A. 

11 718, l6l3; L'J/. 23; Com. 

fiercely, P. L. x. 478, xii. 593. lj)8, 550. 

iiercenels, P. X. ix. 462. fill'd up, P. L. viii. 468. 

fiercer, P. L. ii. 45 ; P. P. iv. filling, Son. xv. 2. 

567- tills, P. L. iii. 731, vii. 88, xi. 

fierceft, P. L. ii. 44, iv. 927, vi. 336 ; S, A. 552. 

314; S.A. 127- film, P. L. xi. 412. 

fiery, P. L. i. 52, 68, 173, 184, filth, P. L. x. 630. 

377, ii- 180, 512, 531, 620, fin, P.R. ii. 345. 

635, iii. 522, iv. 402, 978, vi. final, P. L. ii. 142,563, iii. 458, 

17, 55, 80, 213, 215, 304, vi. 798, ix. 88, x. 1085, xi. 

3.91,479, xii- 208,257, 492, 62, 493; P.R- i. 46l, iii. 

644; P. R. i. 311, ii. 16, iv. 211; S.A. 11/1. 

424, 581; 6'.^. 27, 549,1690; finally, P. L. iii. 150; S.A. 

Od. Cir. 7 ; Pf. cxiv. 18. 1296. 

fiery-wheeled, II Pen/. 53. find, P. LA. 165, 320, 648, ii. 

fig-tree, P. L. ix. 1101. 83,344,403,525,802,1011, 

fight, P.L. ii. 20, 914, iv. 945, iii. 24, 131, 145, 213, 227, 

1003,vi.30,48,87, 234,243, 228, 453, 631, 671, iv. 448, 

296, 308, 403, 423, 448, 454, 575, 796', 849, 938, v. 9, 28* 

531, 537 , 687, 6*93, 786, x. 49, 93, 114, 429, 494, 531, 

278, xii. 289,385,386; P. R. vi. 172, 341, 433, 453, vii. 

iii. 307, 328, 344; S. //.llll, 31, viii. 97, 366, 375, 433, 

1175, 1222, 1226, 1253; Pf. 438, 479, 523, 624, ix. 119, 

lxxxviii. 19. 129,160,181,219,257,333, 

fighting, P.L. ii. 1015, vi. 249; 370, 381, 414, 421, J071, 

P. P. iv. 140. 1176, x. 52, 844, 894, 968, 

figure, P. L. vii. 426, xii, 241, xi. 223, 890, xii. 40, 273, 

figures, S. A. 105. 295, 522 ; P. R. i. 121, 459,- 

file, Son. xi. 6. ii. 59, 131, 208, iv. 130, 333, 

files, P. L. \.567, iv. 797, v. #77 ; S. A.40, 304, 423, 6l0 ¥ 

651, vi. 339, 599. 771, 1716, 1376; Lye. 73; 

filial, P. L. iii. 269, iv. 294, vi. L'Al. 5 ; Arc. 1 2 ; Com. 204, 

722, vii. 175, 587, xii. 306" ; 304, 500, 606,611 ; Vac. Ex. 

P. R. i. 177 ; S.A. 511. 83 ; Brut. 11 ; Soph. 2 ; Pf. 

fill, P. L. i. 350, iv. 507, 733, \ . 29, lxxxiii. 50, Ixxxiv. 14. 

v. 389, 504, vii. lO's, 397, find out, P. L. ii. 4()6, x. 899; 

531, viii. 101, 214, ix. 196, P. R. i 101 ; 11 Penf. 168 ; 

595, 1005, 1012, x. 506, 892, Com. 307 ; Fore of Con. 13. 

xii. 177, 17«, 558 ; P. R. iii. finding, P. L. iv. 8*99 ; 5. A. 

332 ; 7/ Pc///! 4, 128 ; Com. 619 ! Ep. 7/o/;/' I. 11. 

548, 931; Sou. i. 3, ix. 10, finds, P. L. iii. 228, iv. 92, v. 

xiv. 14; Pf. exxxvi. 26. 531 ; P. R. i. 334, iv, 319 . 

fill'd, P. L. i. 495, 707, ii. 129, S.A. 104.6. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



&nd% P. L. v. 231, viii. 586; 
P. R. i. 495, iv. 4S6\ 

finelt, Pf. lxxxi; 66. 
in fine* 6'. A 702. 

finger, P. Pc. i v. 42 8 iOrf.JV^. 95. 

fingers, Lye. 4. 

finger's, Cow. 914. 

lingers', Pf. viii. 9; 

fini'fh, P.L. iv. 66l. 

finiih'd, P. L ii. 284, 815, iv* 
727, v. 559, vi. 141, 522, vii. 
548; S. A. 1710. 

fi niftier, P. L. xii. 375. 

finite, P. L. x. 802. 

finny, C'ww. 115. 

fins, P. L* vii. 401. 

fir, P. L. iv. 139, vi. 574, x* 
1076. 

fire, P. L. i; 48, 77, 151, 229* 
234, 280^298, 395, 612, 6'71, 
701, ii. 67, 69, 88, 141, 176, 
434, 520, 58 1 , 595, 600, 603, 
647,9t2*.937, 1013, iii. 594, 
715, v. 439, 893, vi. 50, 214, 
245, 485, 546, 580, 849, 876, 
ix. 392, 634, 1036, x. 1073, 
1078, xi 217, 441, 472 ■, 566i 
658, 900, xii. 182, 202, 203 ; 
P.Ji.*ii.l24, iii.220, iv.201; 
S. A. 1435 ; UAL 112; It 
Pen/. 94; Com. Ill, 433; 
Son. xx. 3 ; Od. Nat. 28, 159 ; 
0(L D. f; T. 62 ; Vac. Ex. 40 ; 
Pf. ii. 27, vii. 21, lxxx. 65, 
lxxxiii. 53, lxxxv. 12* 

fire, (verb) P. L. vii. 520. 

fir'd, P. L. iv.557; S.A. 1419. 

fires, P. L. i. 346, ii. 170, 213, 
275, 401, iv. 667, v. 177, 
417, vi. 413j 756, vii. 87, xii. 
256. 

fires, (verb) P. L. ii. 709>. 

firm, P. U i. 350, 554, ii. 56, 
497, 589, iii. 75, 418, iv. 695, 
873, v. 210, 502, vi. 6'9, 242, 
399, 534, 911, vii. 267, 362, 
443,586, ix. 286, 359, 1160, 
x. 295, xi. 71, xii. 127; P.#. 



i.4, iv. 292, 534; Com. 588; 
Son. xv. 5, xvii. 13; Pf. ii. 
13,v.26,lxxx.64jlxxxiii.20. 

firmament, P. L. ii. 175, iii. 75, 
574, iv. 604, vi. 757, vii. 26l, 
264, 274, 344, 349, 390, viii. 
18, xi. 206; Com. 598; P/. 
viii. 11. 

firmer, P. L. xi. 498. 

firmed, S. A. 796. 

firmlier, S.A. 1398. 

firmly* P. I* vi. 430. 

firmnefs, P. L. v. 324, ix* 279, 

firft, P. I.i.1,8,19,27,28 33, 
376,514,656,6S4,ii. 19, 129* 
201,324,379,402,617,680, 
690, 740, 742, 760, 1002, 
1037, iii- 64, 129, 131, 134, 
356, 372, 383,419, 464, 549, 
562,634, 656, iv. 9> 12, 121, 
192, 244, 356, 408, 409, 430, 
528, 570, 624, 643, 710, 757, 
921,935, 947, 999, v. 124, 
137, 16*5, 265, 418, 472, 659, 
660, vi. 18, 92, 151, 153, 154, 
164, 26'1, 327, 394, 661, 724, 
774, vii. 63* 86, 244, 255, 
260, 354, 355, 370, 384, 484, 
501* 636, viii, 90, 96, 284, 
288, 297, 530, 555, 633, ix. 
25, 70, 97, 170, 171, 204, 
213j 261, 305, 368, 383, 412, 
511,555,571,616,718,743, 
747,769,835,848,895,930, 
949,1012,1030,1079,1115, 
1162, 1186, x,39, 109, 172, 
316, 326, 402, 582, 604,652, 
707,831,950, xi. 55, 57, 136, 
168, 182, 188, 277, 423, 467, 
572, 587,591,789, xii. 173, 
273,320,331,350,353,472, 
498; P.R. i. 155, 157, 187, 
221,277, 319, ii- 107, 133, 
244, 328, 427, iii. 1SS, 195, 
278, 295, 363, iv. 129, 176, 
293,504; 5.^.219,773,781, 
1071, 1435, 1548, 1562,1578, 
1594; ij/c.48; UAL 114; 



£ 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



• llPenf. 51; Com. 46,82,325, 

4&9, 672, 963 ; Son. i. 6, xiii. 

2 ; Otf. JVaf . 26, 155 ; Od. Cir. 

3,25; Od. Sol. Muf. 24 ; 

Vac. Ex. 2, 11. See father, 

parents, 
firit-begot, P. P. i. SO- 
firft-born, P. L. i. 48.9, 510, iii. 

1, xii. 189; S.A. 391, 1576; 

P/. exxxvi. 37. 
firft-created, S. A. 83. 

at firft, P. P. i. 114; 5. ^f. 
883, 1035. 

at the firft, P. P. ii. 59- 
firft-fruits, P. L. xi. 22, 435. 
firftlings, P. L. xi. 437. 
firft-mov'd, P. i. iii. 483. 
Firft- Mover's, P. L. vii. 500. 
iifli, P. L. i. 463, vii. 401, 447, 

503, 521, 533, viii. 341, 346, 

395, x. 604, 711, xii. 67; 

P. P. ii. 344; Pf. viii. 21. 
fifhermen, P. R. ii. 27. 
fifty, P. L. iv. l6'S. 
filt, S.A. 1235. 
fit, P. L. ii. 306, iii. 454-, 643, 

iv. 816, 953, v. 69, 148, 315, 

348, 6*90, vi. 303, 543, 876, 

vii. 31, viii. 390, 448, 450, 

ix. 89, 489, x. 139, 242, 

626, 899, xi. 271,571, xii. 

597 ; P. P. i. 73 ; II Pen/. 

78 ; Arc. 76 ; Com. 546, 700, 

792 ; Od. Pafs. 42 ; Od. D. 

F. L 46 ; Vac. Ex. 32. 
fitly, P. L. viii. 394; Of/. Pafs. 

49. 
fits, & .4. 929, 1237, 1318; 

Brut. 10. 
fitter, P. />• xi. 98, 262. 
iittclt, P. L. ix. 89; P.R. iv. 

373. 
fitting, P. P. iv. 219. 
five, r« /-. v. 104, 177, x. 6*57. 
fix, P. /,. i. 382, xii. 432; 
TlPenf. 41- Pf. Ixxxvii. 20. 
fix'd, J'. L. i. 97, 206, 56(), 
723, ii. 18, 560, iii. 481, 629, 



669, iv. 465, v. 176, 621/ 

vii. 586, viii. 3, ix. 735, 952, 

ll6(), x. 295,553,661,773, 

xi. 851, xii. 555, 627; P. R> 

i. 127; S. A. 726, 1481, 

1637; Com. 819; -S'ow.ix. 9; 

OJ. IW. 701, 241. 
fixed, IlPenf. 4. 
fixes, P. L. iv. 28 ; Com. 529. 
flag, P. L. ii. 900 J Com. 604. 
flail, UAL 10S. 
flame, P. L. ii. 889, iv. 784, 

v. 807, 891, vi. 483, 584, 

766, ix. 637, x. 232, 1075, 

xi. 120; P. R. iii. 26; 5. A. 

262. 1351 ; Cww. 129, 79o ; 

Orf. JVo/. 81; Ep.M. Win. 

20;P/lxxxiii. 55. 
ftam'd, P. L. i. 62, x. 562; 

P.P. i.216. 
Flamens, Of/. Nat. 194. 
flames, P. L. i. 62, 1S2, 222, 

ii. 61, 172, 214, 754, iii. 

470, vi. 58, 75 1; S.A. 1433 ; 

Lye. 171 ; UAL 6l ; Com. 

673. 
flaming, P. L. i. 45, 664, iii. 

394," iv. 554, v. 598, 875, vi. 

17, 102, 213, vii. 134, viii. 

162, ix. 156. xi. 101, 216, 

xii. 592, 643; Od. Cir. 1. 
flank, P. J,, vi. 570. 
flaring, IlPenf 132. 
flaming, P. L. vi. 751. 
flamy, Lye. 123. 
flat, P. L. i. 46*1, ii. 143, ix. 

627,987; P.P. ii. 223, iv. 

363 ; S. A. 595 ; Com. 375. 
flatly, P. L. v. 8 19. 
flatter, P. R. i. 474. 
flatter'd, P. L. x. 42 ; 0</. Pafs. 

31. 
flatteries, P. P. iv. 125. 
flattering, P. P. i. 375 ; £. ^ 

392. 
flaunting, Com. 545. 
flavour, S. A. 544. 
flaw, P. L. x. 6'Q8. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



flaws, P. R. iv. 454. 

fled, P. X. i. 420, ii. 165, 6l3, 

787, 790, 99*, iii. 512, 712, 

iv. 919, 1014, 1015, vi. 362, 

395, 531, 538, 868, ix. 53, 

58, 394, x. 339, 713, xi. 

330, 563, 841; P.R. i. 311, 

ii. 270; S. A. 139, 264,; Com. 

662; Son. xxiii. 14; Od.Nat. 

205 ;Od, D. P. I. 4*8; Ep.M. 

Win. 68 ; Pf cxiv. 7. 
fled'ft, P. X. iv. 963. 
iledge, P. X. iii. 627, vii. 420. 
fleece, S. A. 538. 
fleec'd, P. X. vii. 472. 
fleecy, P. X. iii. 558, v. 187, 

xi. 648; IlPenf. 72; Com. 

504. 
fleet, P. X. ii. 636, iii. 457 ; 

P. .R. iii. 313; Com. 896. 
fleeting, P. X. x. 741. 
■flefti, P. X. i. 428, iii. 284, 434, 

iv. 441, 483, viii. 468, 495, 

629, ix. 914, xi.4, 888, xii. 

180,303,405; P. R. i. l62; 

Pf. lxxxiv. 7. 

one flefh, P. X. viii. 499, ix. 

959. 
flefhlieft, P.R. ii. 152. 
fleflily, P. JR. iii. 387 ; iv. 599 J 

II Pen/. 92. 
fleihy, Od. Paf. 17. 
flew, P. X. iii. 445, 521, 717, 

iv. 194, v. 87, 251, vi. 213, 

507, 642, viii, 264, x. 284; 

P. R. iv. 582; S. A. 262; 

Son. xiv. 11. 
flew off, P. X. vi. 614. 
flew up, P. X. xi. 15. 
flies, P. X. ii. 612, 950, iii. 

435, v. 176, 274, xi. 855, 

xii. 177; P^R. i. 39, iv. 15. 

Com. 668. 
flight, P. X. i. 14, 225, 555, ii. 

80, 221, 407, 632, 928, iii. 

15, 563, 631, 741, iv. 12, 

595, 913, 921, 922, v. 89, 

266, 871, vi. 152, 187,236, 



285, 367, 397, 539, 79S 
vii. 4, 294, 430, viii. 199 
x. 83, xi. 7, 190, 202 
P. R. ii. 241, iii. 325 
S.A.974, 1118; L'Al 4,1 
Com. 158, 579, 832; Od. 
Nat. 72. 

fling, IlPenf. 131. 

flings, L'Al. 113. 

flint-ftones, Pf. cxiv. 18. 

float, Lye. 12 ; Com. 249. 

floated, P. L. ix. 503. 

floats, P. X. vii. 432, xi. 850. 

floating, P. X. i. 196, 310, x. 
296, xi. 745; P. R. iv. 
5S5 ; -S. A. 1072. 

flock, P. X. v. 709, vi. 857, x. 
273, xi. 437, 648, xii. 19; 
P. P. iv. 511; S. A. 1450; 
Xj/c. 24 ; Com. 499 ; P/; 
lxxx. 3. 

flock'd, P.P. i. 21. 

flocking, P. X. i. 522 ; Od. Nat. 
232. 

flocks, P. X. iii. 44, 435, iv. 
185, 252, vii. 461, 472, xii. 
132;P.jR.iii.260;Xyc.29; 
L'Al. 72; Arc. 103; Com. 
175, 531, 540, 712. 

flood, P. X. i. 195, 239, 312, 
324, 419, ii. 577, 587, 640, 
m.535,715, iv. 231, vii. 5? ', 
xi. 402, 472, 748, 756, 757, 
831, 840, 893, xii. 117; 
P.R. i. 24, ii. 178, iii. 436, 
iv. 201; Lye. 84, 185; Arc. 
29 ; J/ Penf. 94 ; Cow. 19, 
831,930; Od.Pa£.37; 0d. 
on Time, 13. 

floods, P. X. i. 77, vi. 830, vii. 
295 ; Pf. cxiv. 17, exxxvi. 40. 

floor, Lye. 167. 

Flora, P. X. v. 16. 

Flora's, P. K. ii. 365. 

florid, P. X. iv. 278, vii. 90, 
445. 

flourifh'd, P. X. iv. 699, ix. 
672 ; So/?, x. 10. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

flourifliing, P. JR. iii. SO. flows, P. L. v. 633, ix. 81, xsi, 

flouts, P/lxxx. 28. 1.58 ; Pf. iii. 34. 

flow, P. L. iii. 31, v. 410, v. fluctuates, P. X. ix. 668. 

195, viii. 601, ix. 239 \ &p* fluid, -P- £1 v 'i- 34-9, vii. 237, xi. 

W. 8k. 10; P/ lxxxviii. 60. 882. 

flow'd, P. L. i. 11, iii. 518, v. flung, P. L. i. 6l0, vi. 654, viii. 

150, vi. 332, vii. 8, 279, xi. 517- 

241 ; P. /{. iii. 255; S. A. flushing, P. L. ix. 887- 

547. flute, Lye. 33 ; Com. 173. 

Sower, P. L. i. 316. iii. 353, iv. flutes, P. L. i. 551. 

270, 6*44, 652, 697y v. 481, flutter'd, P. L. iii. 491. 

747. vi. 475, ix. 206, 428, fluttering, P. L. ii. 933. 

432; P. it. i. 67; iii. 314; fly, P. L. i. 372, ii. 879, »»« 

-S. ^. 144, 728, 938, 1654 ; 494, iv. 22, 73, 75, 859, 9*0, 

Cow. 633; Lye. 106, 148; 948, 9$3, v. 871, 889, vi. 

Od. D. F. I. 1 ; £/>. M. Win. 295, vii. 389, xi. 547, 650 ; 

39; jy. lxxx. 45, lxxxi, P. J£. i. 440, ii. 75, iii, 2l6, 

66. iv. 629; S. A. 1541; Cvm. 

flower-inwoven, Od. Nat. 187, 939, 9?6 t 1013; Son. vii. 3, 

flower'd, P. L. vii. 317- xviii. 14; Od. Nat. 236; Or/. 

flowerets, P. L. v. 379, 636, vi. on Time, 1 ; Vac. Ex. 28 ; P/. 

784 ; Lye. 135. vii. 1, lxxxiv. 15, lxxxviii. 

flowering, P. L. v. 293. f 1. 

flowers, P. L.i. 771, ii. 245, 359, % back, Od.D. f. I. 60. 

iv. 241, 256, 26*9, 334, 438, flying, P. L. ii. 574, 643, 942, 

451, 709, v. 126, 212, 482, iv. 913, v. 688, vi. 214,536, 

636, viii. 44, 286, 527, ix. vii. 17, 429, x. 276, P. 7i, 

193, 278, 408, 437, 840, iii. 323; 6'. A. 254; Com. 

1039, x. 603, 679, xi. 273, 829- 

327, 594; P. R. ii. 356; fly'it, P. L. iv. 482, v. 175. 

5. A. 9S7, 1742; Lj/c. 47, foam, P. L. i. 203, vi. 512. 

141 ; L'Al. 147 ; Com. 994 ; foaming, P. L. vi. 391, x. 301, 

Ep. M. Win. 57. xi. 643. 

flow is, (verb) P. L. iii. 357. foe, P. L. i. 122, 179, 64.9, »• 

flowery, P. L. i. 410, iii. 30, 72, 78, 152, 202, 210, 369, 

56"9, iv. 254, 626, 772, viii. 463, 722, 769, 804, 1039, 

254, ix. 456, xi. 881; P. R. iii. 179, iv. 7, 372, 373, 749, 

iv. 247, 586; II Penf. 143; v. 724, vi. 129, 14-9, 363, 

Com. 239; Od. May-M. 3; 530, 537, 551, vii. 139, ix. 

Vac. Ex. 84; Ariojt. 1. 15, 253, 280, 295, 323, 327, 

flowery-kirtled, Com. 254, 36 1, 383, 486, 9^1, x. 11, 

flowing, P. L. iii. 640, iv 496, 431, 926, 1033, 1038, xi. 

v. 444, x. 910. xi. 846; 155; P. /(. i. 10, 387, 56l ; 

P. R. ii. 436; II Ten/. 34; 8. A. 8S-1, 1 193, 1262. 146% 

Ep. llubf. II. 31. 1518 ; Od. J). F. 1. 66 ; Vac- 

flown, P. L. i. 502, vii. 503, x t Ex. 83 ; P/l vii, 12, lxxx. 26. 

422. arch-foe, P. I,, vi. 259* 



VERBAL INDEX 



rocs', S. A. 366. 

foes, P. L. i. 437, ii. 504, iii. 

258, 3.99, 677, v. 735, 876, 

yi. 39, 402, 440, 487, 603, 

627, 688, 785, 831, 880, xi. 

703, xii. 453; P. It. i. 159; 

S. A. 109, 423, 424, 1529, 

1586, 1667; Cow. 449; Pf 

iii. 1, 21, vii. 21, viii. 6, 

lxxx. 8, lxxxi. 57, lxxxiii. 

5, lxxxvi. 62. 
fog, Com, 269, 433. 
foil, P. L. x. 375, xii. 389; 

P. It.iv.569; Lye. 79 1 Pf- 

cxiv. 10. 
foil'd, P. L. i. 273, ii. 330, vi. 

200, viii, 608, ix, 1076; 

P. R. i. 5, iv. 565 ; P/. 

exxxvi, 65. 
foils, P. it iv. 13. 
iold, P. X. ii. 651, iv. 187, 

192, ix. 499 ; S. A. 1665 ; 

Lye. 115; Com. 93, 498, 

542 ; Sort, xviii. 6, 13. 
folded, Com. 343; 0</. Nat. 

172. 
folds, P. L. i. 724, ii. 645, vii. 

484, ix. 161, 4-98, xi. 431; 

P. R. i. 244. 
follow, P.* L. m. 206, 662, 866, 

iv. 469, 476, viii. 6ll, ix. 

133, xi. 291, 371, xii. 335; 

P. R. i. 440, 483, iii. 430; 

Arc. 86, 90 ; Com. 657, 975, 

1018. 
follow'd, P. L. i. 238, 467, vi. 

59S, vii. 222, 558, viii. 508, 

6i5, x. 533, xii. 439; San. 

xiv. 8; P/; lxxxi. 51. 
followers, P, L. i. 606, xii. 484 ; 

P.P. ii. 419. 
following, P. L. ii. 1025, iv. 

437, 481, vii. 3, ix. 808, x. 

278,314, 367, 589, xi. 352; 

P.P. i. 192, 315. 
follows, P. L. ii. 25. 
folly, P. L. ii. 686, iii. 153, 

iv. 905, 1007, vi. 139, vii. 



130, viii. 553, x. 619, 621, 

xii. 569; S. A. 377, 825, 

1000, 1043; II Penf. 6l ; Pf 

lxxxv. 35. 
Folly, // Penf 2, 
foment, P, L. iv. 669, x. 107 1. 
fomented, P. L. xi. 338. 
fond, P. L. iii. 449, vi. 90, 

viii. 195, 209, x. 834; S. A. 

228, 812, 1642 ; II Penf. 6; 

Com. 67. 
fondly, P. L. iii. 470, vii. 152, 

ix. 999 P x. 564, xi. 59; Sow. 

xix. 8. 
Fontarabbia, P. JL. i. 587. 
food, P. L. v. 400, 401, 407, 

465, 633, vii. 126, 40S, 540, 

ix. 237, 238, 240, 573, 717, 

76S, x. 986, xi. 54, xii. 74 ; 

P. R. i. 30S, 545, 353 t 429, 

ii. 246, 268, 320, iv. 588 ; 

& A. 574, 1366; PC lxxx. 

55, lxxxv. 52. 
fool, P. L. vi. 135 ; S. A. 77, 

201, 203, 298, 496, 907, 

1338 ; Co?n. 662. 
fool'd, P. L. x. 880. 
foolilhnefs, Com.706. 
fools, P. X. iii. 496; P. .R. ii. 

453 ; Com. 4,77 ; Pf v. 12. 
foot, P. i. i. 6*25, vii. 228, ix. 

71, x. 347, xi. 645, 848, 

858; P.P. iii. 327, iv. 559, 

610 ; S.A. 136, 1618. 

at foot, P.L. iii.4S5. 

on foot, P.L. ii. 941. 
foo ? inir, Lye. 103 ; Com. 146. 
footftep, P. L. xi. 329. 
fjotlteps, Pf. lxxxv. 06. 
forage, P. L. xi. 646. 
forbear, P. X. viii. 49O; P/: 

vii. 45. 
forbearance, P. _L. x. 53. 
forbid, P. X. v. 62, ix. 356, 

703, x. 685 ; P. P. i. 495 ; 

S. A. 13. 
forbiddance, P. L. ix. 903. 
forbidden, P. L. i. 2, ii. 85?, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



iv. 515, v. 69, ix. 904, 1025, 
1026, x. 554, xii. 279; S. A. 
1139, 1409. 

forbicki'n, P. P. ii. 369; S. A. 
555. 

forbidder, P. L. ix. 815. 

forbidding, P. L. li. 4-75, ix. 
753 ; Cow. 269. 

forbids, P. L. iv. 82, v. 6l, 
ix. 750, 753, 758, 759, xi. 
49 ; S. A. 1320. 

forbore, P. L. ii. 736, ix. 
1034. 

forborn, P. X. ix. 747; Pf. 
iv. 9. 

force, P. X. i. 94, 101, 121, 
144, 145, 230, 248, 560, 574, 
620, 647, 649, ii. 62, 135, 
188, 250, 358, 551, 853, 
1012, iii. 91, iv. 813, v. 730, 
vi. 41, 125, 222, 293, 324, 
622, 794-, ix. 348, 1046, 
1173, 1174, x. 246, xii. 412, 
521,525; P.P. i. 97, 153, 
ii. 479, iv. 6"02 ; S. A. 146, 
935,1087,1206,1219,1273, 
1369, 1397, 1627, 1647; 
Com. 590, 607, 9<)6; Son. 
xxiii. 4; Od. D. F. I. 4; 
Fore, of Con. 6 ; Vac. Ex. 6j» 

89. 

force with force, S. A. 1206. 
fore'd, P.P. ii.243,vi.598, x. 

475, 829, 991 ; 8. A. 1096, 

1451 ; Lye. 4. 
forces, P. R. iii. 337- 
forcible, P. L. ii. 793, ix. 955. 

more forcible, P. L. vi. 465. 
forcing, P. L. vi. 196. 

P. t. ii. 6*12, xii. 130; 

P.P. i. 328, iv. 510. 
forecaft, Vac. Ex. 13. 
forecasting, & A. 254. 
forefathers, P. ii. iii. 422; P/. 

Ixxxvii. 12. 

0, /'. /,. \ iii. 497, ix. 908, 

x!. 541; .S'. y/. 940, 1483. 
[oing, P. P. iv. 483. 



forehead, Lye. 171 ; Com. 733 > 
foreign, P. L. iii. 548, x. 441, 

xii. 46; Com. 265 j Vf. lxxxi. 
39. 
foreknew, P. L. iii. 117- 
foreknowing, P. L. xi. 773. 
foreknowledge, P. P. ii. 559, 

560, iii. 116, 118, xi. 768. 
forela,nd, P. L. ix. 514. 
forelock, P. X. iv. 302 ; P. it 

iii. 173. 
foremoft, P. L. ii. 28. 
forerun, P. L. i. 677. 
forerunners, P. L. xi. 195. 
forerunning, P. L. vii. 584. 
forefaw, S. A. 737 ; Pac. Ex, 

72. 
forefeeing, P. L. i. 627, iii- 79- 
forefeen, P. L. iii. 121, vi. 673, 

xi. 763. 
foreiight, P.L. i. 119,xi.368. 
forefignify, P. it. iv. 464. 
forelkins, S. A. 144. 
forett, P. L. i. 547, 613, 782, 

iv. 342, vii. 458, ix. 117, 

xi. 189; P- P- ii. 359, iii. 

208; Pf. viii.20. 
forefts, // Pen/ 119 J Cow. 423. 
foreftall, Com. 362. 
foreftall'd, P. L. x. 1024. 
foreflalling, Cow. 285. 
foretafted, P. P. ix. 929- 
foretel, P. P. xii. 242 ; P. It. 

iv. 375 ; -Sow. i. 10. 
foretold, P. L. ix. 1171, x. 38, 

191,482, 1051, xi. 771, xii. 

327, 328, 329, 543 ; P. R. i. 

238, 239, 453, ii. 87, iii. 351, 

iv. 204, 478, 502 ; S. A. 23, 

44, 525, l6()2. 
forewarn, P. L. ii. 810, vii. 73 f 

ix.6l, xii. 507. 
forewara'd, P. L. vii. 41, ix. 

378. 
forewarning, P. L. x. 876. 
forfeit, P. L. iii. 176, x. 304; 

S. A. 508 ; 0d. Nat. 6. 
forfeiture, P. L. iii. 221. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



forge, P. L. iv. 802, xi. 564. 
forgery, S. A. 131 ; Com. 698. 
forget, P. L. iii. 32, 415, iv. 

512, 639, v. 550, ix. 474, xi. 

878 ; II Penf. 42 ; Com. 76 ; 

Son. xviii. 5. 
forgetful, P. X. ii. 74, iv. 54. 
forgetfulnefs, P. L. ii. 608. 
forgets, P. X. ii. 585, 586. 
forgive, S. A. 761,787, 954; 

Pf. lxxxv. 8. 
forgiven, P. L. x. 956. 
forgivenefs, 5. ^. 909, 1376, 
forgot, P. L. ii. 747, xi. 807; 

S. A. 479; ^o». xxii. 3; Orf. 

JVaf . 67. 
forked, P. X. x. 518, 519. 
forlorn, P. X. i. 180, ii. 6l5, 

iv. 374, vii. 20, ix. 9 10, x. 

921 ; UAL 3 ; Cow. 39 ; Pf 

Ixxxviii. 26. 
form, P. L. i. 591, ii. 532, iii. 

605, iv. 876, vi. 433, ix. 

457, x. 214, 543, 872 ; P. P. 

iv. 364, 599; Com. 70, 215; 

Son. xi. 2 ; Od. JVa*. 8. 
form'd, P. X. i. 705, iii. 124, 

iv. 297, 365, 441, v. 516, 

824, 853, vi. 690, vii. 276, 

356, 524, viii. 469, 596, ix. 

149,392, 898, xi. 369, 571. 
former, P. X. ii. 234, 585, iv. 

94, v. 658, viii. 290, ix. 

1006, xii. 105; S. A. 372, 

416, 1510. 
formidable, P. X. ii. 649. 
forming, P. X. viii. 470. 
formlefs, P. X. iii. 12, 708. 
forms, P. X. i. 358, 481, 789, 

iii. 717, v. 105, 457, 473, 

573, vii. 455, viii. 223, xii. 

534; P. R. iii. 322; Com. 

605. 
forfake, P. X. i. 368, x. 914, 

xii. 118 ; Od. Nat. 198 ; Pf. 

Ixxxviii. 57. 
forfaken, P. X. v. 878 ; Lye. 

142. 



forfook, P. X. i. 432, xi. 516; 

Od. Nat. 13 ; Od. D. F. I. 

51. 
fort, S. A. 236. 
forth, P. X. v. 712, vi. 749, ix. 

413, 847, x. 463, xi. 97, 

175, 261, 313; P. R. i. 1,58, 

189, ». 43, iii. 305, iv. 62; 

S. A. 804; Cow. 710; Pf. 

lxxxv. 51. 

from forth, S. A. 922. 
forth-crept, P. X. vii. 320. 
forth-flourim'd, P. X. vii. 320. 
forth-iffued, P. X. ii. 786. 
forth -iffuing, P. X. iv. 779? ix. 

447. 
forth-reaching, P. X. ix. 781. 
forth-rum, P. X. x. 704. 
forth-runYd, P. X. x. 456. 
forth-llepping, P. X. vi. 128. 
forthwith, P. X. i. 221, 356. 

535, 755, ii. 5S5, 874, iii. 

326, 327, v. 86, 586, 630, 

vi. 335, 507, 637, vii. 243, 

399, viii. 271, 291, ix. 724, 

x. 1098, xi. 855, xii. 56; 

P.R. ii. 236 ;S.^. 329- 
fortify, P. X. x. 370. 
fortitude, P. X. ix. 31, xii. 

570 ; S. A. 654, 1284; Son. 

xvi. 3. 
fortunate, P. X. iii. 569. 
Fortune, P. R. iv, 317; Sba. 

xvi. 5. 
fortune, P. #. ii. 429; S. A. 

169, 172, 1093, 1291. 
fortunes, Ep. M. Win. 72. 
forty, P. R. i. 303, 352, 353 

ii. 253,276,315,316. 
fought, P. X. i. 578, ii. 45, 

768, vi. 29, 220, 355, 666, 

xii. 26l. 
foughten, P. X. vi. 410. 
foul, P. X. i. 33, 135, 446, 555 f 

ii. 651, 748, 793, iii. 177, 

692, iv. 118, 571, 840, vi. 

124, 388, 588, 598, ix. 6, 

163, 297, 328, 329, 331, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



1078, x. .086, xi. 51, 124, 
46'4, xii. 337; P.P. iii. l6l, 
iv. 426; S. A. 371, 902; 
Lye. 127; Com. 74-, 383, 464, 
608,645,696; Od.Nat.A\; 
Od. D. F. I. 14 ; Ep. Hobf. 
1.3; Hor. 1.6; Pf lxxxvi. 
48. 

found, P. L. i. 237, 333, 513, 
524, 525, ii. 296, 424, 56l, 
617, iii- 308, 310,411, 443, 
498, 591,615, iv. 174,450, 
799, 875, 900, v. 18, 48, 
406, 501, 513, 742, 848, 896, 
vi. 19, 420, 500, 513, 518, 
635, 694, vii. 298, 302, viii. 
240, 254, 288, 309, 4l6, 435, 
594, ix. 69, 85, 182, 232, 
288, 301, 597, 874, 932, 
1053, 1116, x. 256, 420, 
480, 816, 888, 969, 970, 
1001, xi. 137, 350, 456, 566, 
673, 800, 876, xii. 224, 
537, 608; P. R. i. 104, 
207, 252, 262, ii. 9, 10, 59, 
$7, J 31, 154, 273, 283,301), 
iii. 230, 305, iv. 217, 346, 
373, 447, 532 ; S. A. 20, 
193, 387, 425, 789, 1047, 
1461 ; II Pen/. 93; Com. 
323,579; Od. Pa(i: 25,43; 
Ep. M. Win. 16; Pf. v. 37, 
viii. 14, lxxxiv. 10. 

found out, P. h. i. 621, 703, 
iii. 275, viii. 355; P. R. iv. 
574. 

foundation, P. L. iv. 521 ; 
Com. 808 ; Pf. vii. 30, 
lxxxvi i. 2. 

foundations, P. L. vi. 613, 870; 
Od.Nat. 123; Pf. lxxxvi. 19. 

founded, P. L. i. 427, iv. f55 t 
vii. 230, 618, xii. 550; P. R. 
iii, 295, iv.613 ; S.A. 1504; 
Dante II. 1. 

foundci'd, P. L. ii. 940. 

found'ft, P. L. ix. 407 ; & A. 
427. 



fount, P. L. iii. 357, 535, iv. 237, 

xi. 279; P. R. iv. 590. 
fountain, P. L. i. 783, iii. St, 

375, iv. 229, 760, v. 203, 

vii. 8, 364, ix. 73, 420, 597, 

628, xi. 78, 322 ; P. R. ii. 

184, iv. 289; S. A. 547, 

581 ; Lye. 24, 84 ; Co/a. 912. 
fountain brim, Com. 119- 
fountainleis, P. P. iii. 264. 
fountain -fide, P. X. iv. 326\ 

531, vii. 327- 
fountains, P. L. v. 126, 195, 

x. 860, xi. 826; Pf. lxxxvih 

28, cxiv. 14. 
four, P. L. ii. 51 6, 57 4>, 575, 

898, iv. 233, v. 192, vi. 753, 

827, 845, xi. 128, 737 ; 

P. R. iv. 415. 
four-footed, P. L. iv. 397- 
four-hundred, P. P. i. 428. 
four-times, P. L. ix. 65; P. P. 

ii. 245, 
four-vifag'd, P. P. vi. 845. 
fourth, £.,4.402. 
fowl, P. P. vii. 389, 398, 447, 

451, 503, 521, 533, viii. 

844, 395 y x. 274, 604, 710, 

xii. 67; P.P. ii. 342; S..A. 

16'95 ; Pf. viii. 21. 
fowls, P. L. v. 271 ; P. ii. i. 

501 ; & ^. 694. 
fragile, P. P. iii. 388. 
fragrance, P. L. iii. 135, iv 

()53 f v. 286, viii. 266, ix. 

425. 
fragrant, P. L. iv. 645, 695, v. 

37.9; P- P. ii. 351 ; CW, 

674. 
frail, P.JE.ii. 375, 1030, iii. 180, 

404, iv. 11, vi.345, IX.&40; 

S. t. 056; Lye. 153; Com. 

8 ; 0d. Cir. 19. 
frailty, P. J,, x. 956, xi 

$. A. 369, 783 ; Com. (>\S(>. 
frame, P, L ii. 924, iii. 895, 

v. 154, vii. 273, viii. 15, 81; 

/'/: lxxxvi. 30. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



&&md, P. X. iv. 691, v. 256, 
460, vii. 355, xii. 249. 

frames, P. X. v. 106. 

JFrancifcan, P. X. iii. 480. 

fraternal, P. X. xii. 26, 

fraud, P. X. i. 401, 646, iii, 
152, iv. 121, v. 880, vi. 555, 
794, vii. 143, ix. 55 y 89, 285, 
287, 643,904, 1150, x. 485, 
873 ;P.#.i. 97, 372, iv. 3; 
S. A. 76 ; Son. xv. 13, 

fraudulent, P. L. iii. 6*92, ix. 
531 ; P. P. iv. 609. 

fraught, P. X. ii. 715, v. 66l, 
vi. 876, x. 346, xi. 207; 
P.P. i. 38, iii. 336; S. 4- 
1075 ; Com. 355. 

full-fraught, P. X. ii. 1054. 

fray,P,X. ii. 908,iv. 996,xi. 65 1 . 

freak'd, Lye. 144. 

free, P. X. i. 259, ii. 19, 255, 
551, iii. 99, 124, iv. 68,415, 
434, 747, v. 235, 527, 549, 
791, 792, 819, vi. 292, 451, 
vii. 171, viii. 440, 6l0, 641, 
ix. 351, 352, 671, 802, 825, 
x, 999, xi. 513, xii. 71, 90, 
92, 304; P. P. ii. 48, iii. 
175, 284,358, iv. 102, 131, 
143, 145; .5.^.317, 1235, 
1412, 1572; UAL 11, 40, 
149; Arc. 34; Com. 818, 
1007, 1019; Son. xii. 10, xvi. 
13; Fore, of Con. 6; Eurip. 
2 ; Pf. lxxx. 34, Ixxxi. 22, 
27, lxxxvi. 23, 47. 

free-born, Eurip. 1. 
get free, P. X. vii. 464. 
not free, P. L. iii. 103, v. 
532, vi. 181, ix. 372. 
free-will, P. L. ii. 560, iv. 66, 
v. 236, viii. 6S6 y ix. 1174, x. 
9,46. 
freed, P. L. viii. 182, ix. 140; 
P. R. i. 220, iii. 102, 428 ; 
Son. xv. 11; Pf. vii. 12, 
Ixxxi v. 9, lxxxvi. 46, exxxvi. 
£2. 



freedom, P. X. iii. 109, 128, iv t 
294, v. 797, vi. 169, viii. 
434, ix. 762, xi. 580, 798, 
xii. 95 ; P. R. i. 62, iii. 77 ; 
S. A 1715; Com. 663; Son, 
xii. 9. 

freely, P. L. iii. 102, L75, 240, 
iv. 72, 381, v. 538, 539, vi. 
565, vii. 540, viii. 322, 443, 
ix. 732, 988 ; P. R. iii. 126; 
S. A. vii. 1373; 0d. Pafs. 
12. 

freeze, P. L. i. 7l6. 

freez'd, Com. 449. 

freezing, Od. D. F. I.\ 6. 

French, Son. xxi. 8. 

frequence, P. R. i. 128, ii. 130. 

frequent, P. X. i. 797, iii. 534, 
vii. 148, 504, 571, xi. 317, 
83S; S.A. 275. 

frequented, P. L. xi. 722. 

frequenting, P. L. x. 1091, 
1103. 

frelh, P. X. i. 771, ii. 1012, 
iv. 229, 326, 623, v. 20, 
125, 203, vi. 784, viii. 274, 
467, 515, xi. 135, 845, 
xii. 15, 423 ; P. R. iv. 435, 
567, 570 ; S. A. 10, 547, 
1317; Lye. 29, 138, 193; 
Com. 670 ; Son. xx. 7; Pf 
lxxxvii. 27. 

frefh-blown, UAL 22. 

freflieft, P. X. ix. 1041. 

frefhet, P. R. ii 345. 

fret, P. X. vii. 597 ; Son. ix. 7. 

fretted, P. X. i. 717- 

friars, X'.4/. 104. 

friend, P. X. v. 229, ix. 2, x. 
11, 60; S. A. 334, 492, 
1263; Com. 949; Sow. xxii. 
10. P/. lxxxviii. 69. 

friendliefl, P. X. v. 668. 

friendly, P. X. iv. 36, vi. 22, 
viii, 9, 651, ix. 56*4, 772; 
S. A. 1078, 1508; Com. 160, 
282, 488, 67S. 

friends, P. X, i. 264, iv. S66, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vi. 38, 609, xii. 129; P. R> 

ii. 422, 425; S.A. 187, 189, 

193, 202, 6*05, 1196, 1730; 

Com. 76; Son. ix. 12; P/. 

lxxxvii. 13, Ixxxviii. 33. 
friendship, P. X. xi. 796; S..4. 

495. 
friers, P. X. iii. 474. 
frieze, Com. 722. 
fright, P. X. xi. 121 ; J/ Pen/. 

138. 
frighted, P. X. i. 543, ii. 994; 

Com. 553. 
fringed, P. X. iv. 262. 
fri Iking, P. X. iv. 340. 
frith, P. X. ii. 919. 
frivolous, Com. 445. 
frizzled, P. X. vii. 323. 
frock, S. A. 133. 
frogs, P. X.xii. 177; 6'on. xii. 5. 
frolick, UAL 18 ; Com. 59. 
front, P. X. i. 563, ii. 302, 683, 

iv. 300, 865, vi. 558, 569 t 

6ll, vii. 509, ix. 330, xii. 

592, 632 ; S. A. 497 ; Od. 

Nat. 39 ; Od. Pa/s. 18. 
front to front, P. X. ii. 716, vi. 

105. 
fronted, P. X. ii. 532. 
frontier, P. X. i. 466. 
frontiers, P. X. ii. 998. 
frontifpiece, P. X. iii. 506. 
fronts, Cow. 30. 
frore, P.L.ii.595. 
froft,P.L.xi. 899;^-^. 1577; 

Lye. 47. 
froth, P. JR. iv. 20. 
froth-becurled, PJ\ cxiv. 8. 
froune'd, 7/ Pen/. 123. 
frown, P. X. ii. 713, 720, iii. 

424, vi. 26() ; S. A. 9^8; 

Com. 446, 666 ; P/. lxxx. 59, 

68. 
frown'd, P. X. ii. 719- 
frowning, P.L. ii. 106, iv.924; 

P/. lxxxv. 19. 
frowns, Com, 667. 



frozen, P. X. i. 352, ii. 587, 
602, 620 ; Son. xx. 7. 

frugal, P. X. v. 324, viii. 26 ; 
P. R. iv. 134. 

fruit, P. X. i. 1, iv. 147, 219, 
249, 422, 644, 652, v. 58, 67, 
83, 341, 482, 635, vi. 475, 
vii. 311, 325, 540, viii. 307, 
320, ix. 577, 588, 6l6, 621, 
648, 656 y 659, 661, 686, 731, 
735,741,763,776,781,788, 
798, 851, 869,904,924,929, 
972,996,1011, 1023, 1046, 
1073, 1101, x. 4, 13, 550, 
565, 687, 1053, xi. 86, 125, 
413, 535, xii. 184; Com. 186, 
396; Ep. M. Win. 30; P/ 

fruit-tree, P. X. vii. 311. 
fruit-trees, P. X. v. 213. 
fruitage, P. X. v. 427, x. 56l. 
fruitful, P. X. iii. 337, v. 388, 

vii. 396, 531, viii. 96; S.A. 

181 ; P/. Jxxxiv. 23. 

more fruitful, P. X. v. 320. 
fruition, P. X. iii. 307, iv. 767 r . 
fruitlefs, P. X. v. 215, ix. 648, 

1188. 
fruits, P.L. iii. 67,451, iv. 148, 

331,332, v. 304, 390, 464, 

viii. 44, 147, 212, 527, ix. 

745, x. 603, xi. 26,285,327, 

xii. 551 ; P. .R. ii. 356, 369, 

iv. 30, 589; Com. 712; P/ 

lxxxv. 52. See firft-fruits. 
fruftrate, P. X. ii. 193, iii. 157. 

ix.944,xi. 16; P.R. i. 180; 

S. A. 589, 1149- 
fruitrated, P. R. iv. 609. 
fry, P. X. vii. 400. 
fuel, S.A, 1351 ; P/. ii. 27. 
fuell'd, P.L. i. 234. 
fugitive, P. X. ii. 700, iv. 923, 

ix. 16 ; P. R. ii. 308. 
fugitives, P. X. ii. 57- 
fugue, P. X. xi. 563. 
fulfil, P. X. i, 431, iii. 157, vi. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



*>75, 729, ix. 230, xi. 573, 
xii. 402, 404 ; P. R. iii. 177. 

fulfill'd, P. X. v. 245, vi. 729, 
vii. 635, viii. 491, xi. 602 ; 
P.R. i. 126, iii. 182, iv. 381; 
£. ^. 45, l66l. 

fulfilling, P. L. xii. 396; P. H. 
ii. 108 ; Od. Nat. 106. 

fulgent, P. X. x. 449. 

full, P. X. i. 372, 660, 797, ii. 
24, 147, 388, 688, iii. 332, 
378, iv. 29, 687, v. 517, 
556, 639, 720, 862, vi. 622, 
720, 826, vii. 70, 377, viii. 
232, ix. 62, 802, 819, 1126, 
x. 65, 503, 951, xi. 815, 
xii. 301, 473; P.R, i. 67, 
128, 267, 287, 303, ii.34, 
130, 201, iii. 383, iv. 582 ; 
S. A. 214,310,526,805, S69, 
1574; Com, 59, 175, 711, 
772, 925 ; Son. xxiii. 8 ; Od. 
Nat. 166; Od. Cir. 23; Od. 
D.F.I. 10; Vac. Ex. 70 ; 
Ep. Hobf. I. 7 ; P/ ii. 19, 
iii, 11, lxxxi. 44, lxxxiii. 
8, lxxxv. 32, Ixxxvii, 14, 
Ixxxviii. 30, cxxxvi. 18, 53, 
86. 
at full, P. X. i. 641. 

full-grown, P. L. vii. 436 ; P. R. 
ii. 83. 

full-high, P. X. i.536. 

full-oft, S.A. 759; Arc. 42. 

full-orb'd, P. X. v. 42. 

full foon, P. X. ii. 805, vi. 834. 

fuil-fumm'd, P. R. i. 14. 

fully, P. X. viii. 180, x. 79, 
374; P.H. i. 4; S.A. 1712. 

fulmin'd, P. P. iv. 270. 

fufnefs, P. X. iii. 225 ; P. jR. iv. 
380. 

fume, P.L. iv. 168, viii. 194. 

fum'd, P. X. xi. 18. 

fumes, P. X. ix. 1050; 5. ^. 
552. 

fuming, P. X. v. 6, vii. 609. 

fianaions, & .4. 596* 



funeral, S. ^. 1732; Ep. M* 

Win, 46. 
fur. Com. 707. 
furies, P. X. ii. 596, 67 1, vi. 

859, x. 620 ; P. #. iv. 422. 
furies', Com. 641. 
furious, P. L. iv. 4, vi. 86, 357, 

vii. 213, viii. 244, xi. 854 ; 

S.A. 836; P/l lxxxiii. 5. 
furlongs, Com. 946. 
furnace, P. X. i. 62, ii. 888, 
furniture, P. L. ix. 34. 
furrow, Com. 292. 
further, P. X. iv. 174, 533, x. 

555, 1062, xi. 193, 839, xii. 

620; S.A. 520, 1252,1499; 

Arc. 39; Com. 321, 580. 
further on, S. A. 2. 

no further, P. L. x. 170, 793. 
Fury, Lye. 75. 
fury, P.L. i. 179,235, ii. 6l, 

728, 938, v. 808, vi. 207, 591, 

x. 240 ; Pf. vii. 22. 
future, P. X. ii. 222, iii. 78, v. 

582, vi. 429, 502, vii. 183, 

486, x. 345, 840, xi. 114,357, 

764, 774, 870; P. R.u 396i 

Vac. Ex. 72. 



G. 

gabble, P. L. xii. 56. 

Gabriel, P. X.iv. 549, 561,781, 
865, 877, 886, 1005, vi. 46, 
355,ix.54;P.il.i.l29,130 ? 
iv. 504. 

Gades, P. R. iv. 77. 

gadding, Lye. 40. 

Gadire, S. A. 716. 

gain, P. X. i. 190, ii. 1009, vi. 
907, viii. 122, ix. 332, x.901, 
xii. 199, 223; P.R. i. 397 j 
ii. 419, 435, 486, iii. 29, iv, 
211; S. A. 835; Od. on 
Time, 8. 

gain'd, P. X. i. 471, iv. 512, v. 
174, viii. 435, ix. 529, x, 373, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



y02; P. R. i. 3P1, ii. 435; 

6'o/i. ix. 14. 
gaining, P. X. xi. 768 ; P. R. 

iv. 471 ; Son. xx. 5. 
gains, P. i,. iii. 428, v. 324, ix. 

933. 
'gainll, P. L. i. 470, vi. 224; 

Com. 640; £/>. Hobf.il. 8; 

Dtf/rfe II. 2. 
gainfay, P. L. ix. 1158. 
gait, II Penf. 38. 
Galafp, £orc. xi. 9- 
galaxy, P. L. vii. 579- 
gale, P. R. ii. 364. 
gales, P. L. iv. 156, viii, 515 ; 

Od.Hor. 11. 
Gallia, P. P. iv. 77- 
Galilean, P. R. iii. 233; Lye* 

109. 
Galilee, P.P. i. 135. 
Galileo, P. L. v. 262. 
gamboll'd, P. L. iv. 345. 
game, P. L.vi. 667, xi. 714, xii. 

30; P. R. ii. 342; S. A. 

1331. 
games, P. I,. iv. 551, ix. 33 ; 

5.^. 1312, 1602. 
gamefome, P. L. vi. 620 ; Com. 

173. 
'gan, P. L. vi. 60, ix. 10l6, x. 

710; P.P. iv. 410. 
Ganges, P. L. iii. 436, ix. 82, 
gangreen, S.A. 621. 
Ganymecl, P.P. ii. 353. 
gap,"P. L. vi. 861. 
gap'd, P. L. vi. 577. 
gaping, P. L. ii. 440. 
garb, P. L. ii. 226 ; Com. 759- 
garden, P. L. iii. 66, iv. 209, 

215,226,230,285,529,789, 

v. 260, 368, 752, vii. 538, viii. 

299, 321, 326, ix. 206, 660, 

662, x.98, 116,746, xi.97, 

118,222, 26l ; P. R. i. I. 
garden-plot, P. L. ix. 41 8. 
garden-trees, P. L. ix. 657- 
gardens, P. L. iii. 568, ix. 439; 

P. It iv. 38;!/ Paif 50, 98I. 



gardening, P. L. i v. 328, ix. 205- 

gardening-tools, P.L. ix. 391. 

garifh, 11 Penf. 141. 

garland, P. JL ix. 840, 892 ; 
Com. §50; Ep. M.Win. 21. 

garlands,- P. L. iii. 362, iv. 709, 
xi. 594. 

garrifon'd, S. A. 1497. 

garrulity, S. A. 49 1. 

gall), P. L. vi. 331. 

gafp, Sow. xi. 11. 

gate, P. L. ii. 873, iii. 515, 687, 
iv. 178, 542, 568, 579, 870, 
v. 253, 254, vii. 411, ix. 389, 
x,298,41S,xi. 190, 230, xii. 
571, 638, 643; S.A. 560. 
See heaven, hell, palace. 

gates, P. L. i. 171, 761, ii. 436, 
63 1 , 645, 648, 684, 776 , 853, 
S84, iv. 382, 89$, 9o7, vi.4, 
vii. 206, 565, viii, 331, 241, 
x. 230, 231, xi. 640, 66 1 ; 
P.P. iii. 287, 311, iv. 6l, 
624; S<A.l47, 1597; L'AL 
59 ; Coin. 667 ; Od. Nat. 148 • 
Pf. lxxwn. 5. 

Gath, P.L. i. 465; S^A.266 i 
981,1068,1078,1127, 1129. 

gather, P.P. i. 31 6. 

gather'd, Pi L. iv. 271, v. 207, 
vii. 283, 363, ix. llll,x.299> 
344, 1070, xi. 537; P.P. iii. 
301 ; Com. 595. 

gathering, P, L. iv. 269. 

gathers, P. L. ii. 590, v. 343, 
xii. 631. 

gaudy, II Penf. 6; Cum. S51 ; 
Od. Nat. 33; 

gave, P. L. i. 736, iv. 144, 350, 
380, 787, v. 858, vi. 402, vii, 
175, 541, viii. 514, ix. 266, 
748, 783, 9.96, 1001, 1()66, 
x. 122, 143, 430, 650, xi.4Q, 
72, 182,2/7,339, 497, xii. 
67 ; P.P. 1.66; S.A. 236 , 
822, 1054, 1140; Com. 419, 
553 ; Son. xxiii. 3 ; Ep. llobf 
II. 11 ; Ariqjl. 4. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



gave heed, P. L. iv. 969. 

gave up, P. R. i. 069. 

gave way, P. L. v. 252. 

Gaul, Brut. 8. 

gauntlet, 5. A. 1121. 

gav'it> P. X. ii. 865, vii. 493* 

x. 138. 
gay, P. L. i. 372, iv, 149, 942, 

vii. 444, viii. 274, ix. 428, xh 

582, 615, $66; S.A. 712; 

Lye. 47 ; II Pen/. 8 ; Com. 

?99, 790. 
gayeft, P. X. xi. 18& 
gay'ft, Fac. £5;. 21. 
Gaza, S. A. 41 , 435, 981, 1558. 

1729, 1752, 
Gaza's, P. L. i. 466. 
gaze, P. L. iii. 613,671, iv. 356, 

613, v. 47, vi. 205, ix, 524, 

535,539,578,611; SiA.34, 

567 ; Arc. 43 ; Com. 736 ; 

Od. Nat. 70. 
gaz'd, P.L. v. 57, 272, viii. 258, 

ix. 735, xi, 845 ; P. H. u 

414; Com. 54. 
gazing, P. L. iv. 351. 
gear, Ohm. 167. 
Gebal, Pf. lxxxiii. 25. 
Gehenna, P. L. i. 405. 
gemm'd, P. L. vii. 325. 
gems, P. L. i. 538, ii. 271, iii* 

507, iv. 649, vi.475, xi.583* 

P. R. iii. 14, iv. 119; Com, 

22, 719. 
general, P. L. i. 421, ii. 481, 

773, iii. 328, iv. 144, 492, 

659, xi. 76; S.A. 1524. 
generally, P.P. i. 387. 
general's, P. X. i. 337- 
generate, P. L. vii. 387, x. 894. 
generated, P. L. vii. 393. 
generation, P. L. i. 653, vii. 

102. 
generations, P. L. xi. 344. 
generous, P. P. ii. 479 J Si A, 

1467. 
Genezaret, P. P. ii, 23, 



genial, P. X. iv. 712, vii. 282, 

viii. 59S ; 5. A. 594. 
Genius, I#c. 183; IlPenf. 154; 

Otf. JVa*. 186. 
Gentiles, P. L. iv. 277* xii. 

310; P.P. i. 455, iii. 425, 

\\i 227, 229 ; 6'. A i 150,500; 

py.ii. 1. 

gentle, P. 2*. iii. 585, iv. 156, 

308, 337, 366,404, 488, 806, 

v. 37, 130, viii. 287, 515, 

648, ix, 527> x. 93,919, xi, 

188, 421, xii. 435, 595; 

P. R. iii. 215 ; Lye. 19 ; Arc. 

26 ; Com. 236,271, 304, 337, 

681, 824, 900 ; Son. viii. 6; 

Od. Nat. 38. 
gentlenefs, Co?n. 843. 
gentleft, P. R. ii. 364. 
gently, P. L. i. 529, iii. 583, 

iv. 259, vii. 81, viii. 293, ix. 

431, xi. 298, 758 ; II Penj\ 

60 ; Com. 575. 
Germans, P. R. iv. 78. 
Geryon's, P. L. xi. 410. 
gefture, P. L. u 590, viii. 489, 

ix. 460. 
geftures, P. X.- iv. 128 ; Com, 

464. 
get, P.L. xii. 45; P.P.ii.427» 

iv. 193 5 S.A. 798. 
ghaftly, P. L. ii. 846, vi. 368, 

xi. 481 ; Com. 641. 
ghoft, Com. 434 ; Od. Nat. 234. 
ghofts, P. P. iv. 422. 
giant, P. L. i. 576, 778 ; S. A, 

1181 ; Vac. Ex.93. 
giant-angels,; P. L. vii. 605. 
giant-brood j S. A. L247. 
giantfhip, S, A. 1244. 
giants, P. L. iii. 464, xi. 642, 

688 ; S. A. 148 ; Brut. 9> 
Gibeah, P. L, i. 504. 
Gibeon, P. L. xii. 265. 
Gibraltar, P. L. i. 355, 
Gideon, P. R. ii. 439; 

£3& 



VERBAL INDEX. 

giddy, UAL 141 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 164, 182, 185, 186, 187; S;A* 

51. 121,359,378,578; Od.Nat. 

gift, P. L. iv. 735, v. ip, 366, 78. 

vi. 626, ix. 540, 806, x. 138, given up, P. L. x. 488. 

xi. 340, xii. 138 ; P. R. ii. giver, P. £. viii. 493 ; P.R. ii. 

381, iii. 116, iv. 169 ; S. A. 322 ; Com. 775. 

47, 49, 577, 1354, 1500 ; givers, P. L. v. 317. 

^rw/?. 3. gives, P. X. v. 119, 403, 404, 

gifts, P.L. iv. 715, v.317, viii. viii. 171, ix. 40, 686; Com. 

220, 494, x. 153, xi. 57,612, 26; Ep. Hobf. II. 11 ; Pf. 

636, xii. 500; P. it. ii. 137, lxxxiv. 42. 

391 ; S. A. 358, 589, 679, giving, P. L. iii. 299, vi. 730. 

1026; Com. 754, ; SW. xix. giv'ft, P.L. ix. 810. 

10. glad, P. L. ii. 1011, iii. 270, 

gigantick, P. L. xi. 659; S. A. 630, iv. 150, v. 29, 92, vi. 

1249- 258, vii. 291, 386, viii. 245, 

gilded, P. L. iv. 53 ; Com. 95. 322, ix. 528, 625, x. 383, 

gilds, P. L. iii. 551, vii. 366. 777, xi. 20, 507, xii. 375 ; 

gills, P. L. vii. 415. P. R. i. 477, ii. 53, iv. 441 ; 

gins, S. A. 933. S. A. 924, 1444 ; Lye. 35 ; 

gird, P. £. vi. 542, viii. 82, ix. Arc. 39 ; Son. xxiii. 3; Pp. 

1113. Hobf. 1.6. 

gird on, P. L. vi. 714. glade, P. L. iv. 231, ix. 1085; 

girded, P. -L. ix. IO96 ; P. P. Com. 79- 

i. 120. glades, // Penf. 27. 

girt, P. L. iv. 276, v. 281, vii. gladlier, P. L. vi. 731, viii. 47. 

194, ix. 1116; S.A. 846, gladly, P. L. ii. 1044, vi. 21, 

1228, 1415 ; Com. 214, 602 ; viii. 226, ix. 966, x. 775, xi. 

Od. Nat. 202 ; Ep. Hobf 1. 1. 332, xii. 366 ; S. A. 259 ; 

give, P. L. ii. 14, 153, 157, iii. Com. 413 ; P/I lxxx. 75. 

318, iv. 381, 841, v. 206,485, gladnefs, Pf. iv. 32. 

693, 822, viii. 319, 339, ix. gladfome, Pf. lxxxiv. 26, 

805, 818, xii. 12, 392; P. P. exxxvi. 1. 

ii. 393, iv. 104, l6l, 163, glance, P. L. vii. 405, viii. 533, 

16*4,315; S.A. 1264, 1453; ix. 1034, xi. 442; S.A. 1284; 

UAL 151 ; II Penf. 175 ; Com. 884; Pf lxxxvii. 27- 

Com. 243, 276 ; Od. D. F. I. glanc'd, P. L. x. 1054. 

76; P/^ v. 1, lxxx. 2, lxxxiv. glancing, Com. 80. 

30, lxxxvi. 18. glare, P. L. iv. 402. 

give ear, P. L. ix. IO67. glar'd, P. L. vi. 849, x. 714; 

given, P.L. i. 347, 776, ii. P.P. h 313. 

332, 715, iii. 103, 243, iv. glafs, P. I. i. 288, v. 26l, xi. 

430, 56l, 1007, v. 454, 523, 844 ; 11 Penf. 113 ; Com. 65, 
740, vi. 322, 887, viii. 386, 651 \ Vac. Ex.71 ;Pf exxxvi. 
545, ix. 10, 951, x. 244, 385, 49. 

xi. 255, 502, xii. 66, 282, glariy, P.L. vii. 6l9; Com. 86l ; 

287, 300, .519 ; P. P. i. 37, Pf cxiv. 17. 

431, 442, iii. 251, iv. 104, Glaucus', Com. 874. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



glaz'd, P. L. iii. 590. 

gleam, P. L. iii. 499, iv. 46l, 

xii. 257 ; Com. 225. 
gleaming, P. P. iii. 326. 
glebe, P.P. iii. 259. 
glibb'd, P. P. i. 375. 
glide, P. L. v. 200, vii, 402, ix. 

159- 
glides, P. L. xii. 630. 
gliding, P. .L. iv. 555, xi. 568, 

xii. 629- 
glimmering, P. L. i. 182, ii. 

1037, iii. 429; U Pe/if. 27 ; 

Od. Nat. 75. 
glimpfe, P. L. i. 524, iv. 867, 

vi.642, viii. 156; L'A1.107. 
glimpfes, P. P. i. 93. 
glifter'd, P. L. ix. 643. 
glittering, P. L. iii. 550, iv. 

645, 653, viii. 93, xi. 247; 

Lye. 79; Com. 219. 
glitter, P. L. x. 452. 
glittering, P. _L. i. 535, iii. 366, 

iv. 656, v. 291, 592; P.P. 

iv. 54; Arc. 81; Od. Nat. 

114. 
globe, P. L. i. 291, ii. 512, iii. 

418, 422, 498, 722, iv. 723, 

vii. 280, x. 671; P.P. i. 365, 

iv. 581; Od.Nat. 110. 
globes, P. L. v. 259, vi. 590. 
globous or globofe, P. L. v. 

649, 753, vii. 357. 
gloom, P.L. i. 244, 544, ii.400, 

858, vii. 246, x. 848 ; llPmf. 

80; Com. 132; Od.Nat.77- 
gloomieft, P. L. x. 716. 
gloomy, P. L. i. 152, ii. 976, 

iii. 242, iv. 270, vi. 832; 

P. P. i. 42 ; S. A. 161 ; Cow. 

470,945; Pf lxxxviii. 51. 
gloried, S. A. 334. 
glories, P. L. i. 573, 719 ; Od. 

Nat. 143. 
glorified, P. P. iii. 113. 
glorify, P. L. iii. 695, vi. 725, 

vii. 116; Od.Nat. 154 ;P/. 
lxxxvi. 32. 



glorious, P. i. i. 89, ii. 16, 
179, iii. 376, 612, 622, iv. 39, 
292, 658, v. 153, 309, 362, 
567, 833, vii. 370, 574, viii. 
464, ix. 961, 1177, x. 391, 
474, 537, 721, xi. 211, xii. 
334; P.R. i. 8,242, iii. 70, 
71, iv. 45, 546, 634; S.J. 
36, 363, 855, 1130, 1581, 
1660 ; Son. xiv. 12, xvi. 4 ; 
Od.Nat. 8; Pf. vii. 27, viii. 
2, 24. 
more glorious, P. L. vi. 39, 

xi. 213. 
moll glorious, P. L. iii. 139. 
glorioufly, P. L. iii. 323, 655 ; 
P.R. iv. 127; 5.^. 200, 
1752. 
glory, P. L. i. 39, 110, 141, 
370, 594, 612, ii. 265, 386, 
427, 484, 564, iii. 63, 133, 
164, 239, 312, 388, 449, iv. 
32, 838, 853, v. 29, 719, 738, 
839, vi. 290, 383, 422, 680, 
701,726,747,792,815,891, 
vii. 182, 184,187,208,219, 
499, viii. 12,ix.l35,ll]5, x, 
64, 86, 226, 386, 451, 722. 
xi. 333, 384, 694, xii. 172, 
371, 456,460, 477,546;P.P. 
i. 93, 454, ii. 48, 227, 38 , 
iii. 25, 59, 60, 69, 88, 100, 
105,109,110,111,114,117, 
120,123,127,134,143,144, 
148, 150, 236, 383, iv. 89, 
315, 371, 536; S. A. 167, 
179, 475, 597, 680, 1099, 
1148, 1429; Lye. ISO; Com. 
592 ; Od. Cir. 20 ; Ep. M. 
Win. 61 ; Pf. iii. 7, iv. 8, vii. 
16, lxxxiv. 42, lxxxv. 39 f 
cxiv. 6. 
glorying, P. L. iii. 239. 
glorv's, P. R. iii. 46; S. A. 

303. 
glofs, P. L. v. 435 ; S. A. 948. 
glofiy, P. L. i. 672. 
glow, Od. Nat. 75. 



VOL. I. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



glow'd, P.L. iv. 604, viii. 6l8, 

ix. 427, 887. 
glowing, P. L. iii. 594, v. 10; 

Lye. 145 ; II Pen/. 79 J Cow. 

gloz'd, P. L. iv. 543. 
glozing, P.L. iii. 93; Com.l6l. 
glut, P. L. iii. 259, vi. 580, x . 
990 ; Od. on Time, 4 ; Pf. iv. 
33. 
glutinous, CW. 917. 
glutted, P. L. x. 6'33. 
gluttonies, P. P. iv. 114. 
gluttonous, P. L. xi. 533. 
gluttony, Com. 7/6. 
gnaftiing, P. L. vi. 340. 
gnaw, P. L. ii. 799- 
go, P. L. ii. 456', 826, 100S, v. 
118, 229, 313, vi. 44, 275, 
710, viii. 646, ix. 372, 373, 
382, 1156, x. 71, 177, 265, 
409, xii. 201, 594, 615, 6l7 ; 
P.R. i. 340; S. ,4.954, 961, 
999,1146,1237,1384,1403, 
1427, 172'5; Lye. 108; LAI. 
33; ,4/c 78; Od. Nat. 76; 
Pf. v. 1 8, lxxx. 51, 73, lxxxv. 
53, lxxxviii. 67- 
go on, P. L. xii. 537 ; Com. 779' 
goal, P.L. ii. 531; Cow. 100. 
goary, Lye. 62. 
goat, P. L. ix. 582 ; Cow. 71. 
goats, P. L. vi. 857. xii. 292 ; 

S.A. 1671. 
goblin, P. L. ii. 6S8 ; L'Al. 

105 ; Com. 436. 
God, P. L. i. 12, 201, 369, ii. 
378, 499,622,6*78, 1033, iii. 
3, 77,135,316, 341, iv. 152, 
2 1 5, 225, 299, 427, 6*12, 622, 
636, 6:37, 676, 722, 738, 746, 
884, v. 60, 350, 430, 491, 
524, vi. 175, 176, 184, 343, 
638, 718,796, vii. 232, 243, 
249, 259, 26l , 263, 282, 304, 
831, 336,337,346*, 352, 387, 
. 1-50, 51. ■),. 069, 626, Mil. 
112,119, UJ5, 219,227, 231, 



353, ix. 1, 102, 107, 23* r 
351, 356, 375, 556, 65Q r 65&, 
662, 692, 700, 701, 826, 91 1, 
927, 938, 943, 948, x. 101, 
145,149,171,759,766,785, 
799, 888, 931, 1022, 1045, 
xi. 75, 350, 5/S, 704, 737, 
836, 877, 885, xii. 48, 92, 
106, 118, 120, 174, 200, 209, 
227, 245, 281, 284, 296, 3 1 8, 
339, 349, 382, 562, 6*11 ; 
P.P. i. 293, 442, 460, ii.250, 
253, 311, 475, iii. 426, iv. 
203, 304, 348, 495 ; S. A. 58,. 
273, 295, 356, 36*8, 437, 440, 
441,462,465, 473, 477, 509, 
515,517,529, 555, 581, 667, 
999,1140, 1145, 1150, 1155, 
1156,1176,1178,1270,1340, 
1374,1375,1425,1465,1495, 
1503, 1 527, 1532, 1621 ; Son. 
xix. 7, 9, xxi. 14 ; Od. Nat„ 
199; Od.Sol.Muf. 26; Ep. 
M. Win. 18; Od. Hor. 16 ;. 
P/'iii.6, 19, iv. 2,v.4,9, 16, 
29, vii. 1, 7,38, 39,43, 44, 
lxxx. 14, lxxxi. 3, 1 5, 38, 39; 
41, lxxxri. 1, 25, lxxxiii. 2, 
3, 49, lxxxiv. 8, 16, 27, 30, 
31, 37, 41, lxxxv. 13, 29, 
lxxxvi.7,36';41, 49, lxxx vii. 
20, lxxxviii. 1. 
God alone, P. L. iv. 202. 
God of Hotts, Pf lxxx. 17, 30, 

57, 78, lxxxiv. 29, 45. 

God of Ifrael, P. R. ii. 42. 

from God,. P. L. i. 73, ii. 694, 

v. 6*13, 877, vi. 52, 279, ix. 

262, xi. 867, xii. 66, 170, 

478; P..P.i.238,iii.4l6, 

iv. 350,491 ; S. A. 1170. 

of God, P. L. v. 26, 42, 383, 

402,470,496, ii.49,629,. 

iii. 10,6'95, iv. 209, 320, 

660, v. 117,26*0,322,447, 

536,643,647,650,814, vi. 

5,29, 36,68,88, 133,321, 

770,803,834, vii. 55, 176,' 



VERBAL INDEX. 

200, 235, 527, viii. 67, ix. 717, xii. 427 ; P< R. u 

226, ix. 291, 344, 618, 188, 386, Hi. 21, iv. 348, 

775, 945, 1081, x. 6, 97, 602 ; S.A. 28 ; Od. Pqf. 24. 

i 724, 828, xi. 104, 145, God's, P. L. i> 366, 473, ir. 

148, 377, 508, 622, 799, 649, 655, iv. 192, 067, v. 62(>, 

817, 880, xii. 235, 307, 883, vi. 811, vii. 226, 5/0, 

333, 382, 397, 402, 510, ix. 897, xi. 521, 525, xii. 

579, 633 ; P. R. i. 207, 457 ; S. A. 292, 497, 1053 , 

350, 368, 379, ii. 67, 179, Son. xvi. 6 ; Pf lxxxiii. 4/. 

iv. 197, 310, 520; S.A. gods, P. L. i. 116, 138, 240, 

70, 201 , 222, 293, 378,454; 384, 435, 475, 48 1 , 489, 508, 

Pf. lxxxii. 22, lxxxvii. 9. 509, 570, 579, 629, 720, ii. 

See Houfe, Son. 108, 352, 391, 868, iii. 341, 

the God, P.L. iv. 33, ix. 506 ; iv. 526, 714, v. 70, 71,77, 81, 

Pf. lxxxvi. 53, exxxvi. 6* \l 156, 301, 366. 452, 453, 

to God, P. L. iii. 306, 531, vii. 329, ix. 100, l64, 48p, 

684, iv. 749, v. 512, 520, 547,708,710,712,714,716, 

822, vi. 144, viii. 168, ix. 718, 804, 838, 866, 937, x. 

280, x. Ill, xii. 73, 239, 90, 502, xi. 271, 696, xii. 

477; P.P. ii. 14, iii. 138, 120, 122, 129; P. -R. i. 117, 

141, iv. 303, 315 ; S. A. ii. 171, iii. 81, 430, iv. 06, 

31, 451 ; Od, D. F. I. 74; 342 ; S. A. 545, 859, 896, 

Sen. 2 ; Pf lxxxi. 1, 2. 899 ; H Penf. 46; Arc. 22, 

with God, P. L. v. 461, 763 f 67, 79 ; Com. 11,24, 70, 176, 

xi. 707, xii. 134; P. R. iii. 445,1007; Od. Nat. 211, 

433;5.^.463, 835, 1719; 224; Od. D. F. I. 14; 0d. 

Son. xiv. 2. Hor. 6; Pf. viii. 15, lxxxii, 

a God, P. L. iii. 470, vi. 99. 3, 22, lxxxvi. 25, 27, exxxvi, 

as God, P. R. iv. 192. 6. 

as a God, P. L. ii. 478. demi-gods, P. L. i. 796, ix. 

goddefs, P. L. ii. 757, v. 78, 937. 

381, vii. 40, ix. 547, 732; goes, P. L. iv. 469, xi. 290 ; 

L'Al. 11 • //Pew/. 11, 132 ; S. A, 904 ; Ep. M. Win. 25 ; 

Arc. 18 ; Cow. 128, 267, 842, Pf v. 24. 

865, 902 ; Orf. D. F. I. 48 ; going, P. L. ix. 1157, xi. 290. 

Brut. 1. gold, P. X. i. 372, 483, 682. 

goddefs-like, P* L. viii. 59, ix. 690, 717, ii. 4, 271, 947, -iii. 

389. 352, 506, 541, 595, 6*08, 642, 

goddefles, P. L. xi. 6l5 ; P. P. iv. 220, 238, 496, 554, 590, 

ii. 156. v. 187, 282, 356, 442, 634' 

godhead, P> L. ii. 242, iii. 206, 759, vi. 13,110,475, vii.'4o6, 

vi. 722, vii. 175, 586, ix. 790, 479, 577, ix. 429, 501, 57 8, 

877, xii. 389; 5. A. 1153 ; xii. 2£0, 253, 363 ; P. P. i'. 

Od. Nat. 227. 251, ii. 425, iv. 60, 118,548 ; 

godlefs, P.L. vi. 49, 811. S. A. 389, 831, 849, 958, 

godlike, P. L. i. 358, ii. 511, 1 114 ; Cok. 394; Son. x: 3; 

iih 307, iv. 289, v. 351, vi. Od. Nat. 135 ; Od. Hor. 9. 

67, 301, vii. 110, viii. 249, golden, P. L. i. 538, 715, yty), 

h 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ii. 328, 1005, 1051, iii. 337, 
365, 572, 625, iv. 148, 249, 
305, 763, 997, v. 255, 713, 
886, vi. 28, 102, 527, vii.207, 
225, 258, 365, 597, 600, xi. 
18, 24, 392 ; P. R. ii. 459, 
iii. 277, iv. 74; Lye. Ill; 
L'Al. 146 ; 11 Pen/. 52 ; Com. 
13,214,633,880,933,983; 
Son. xiv. 7, xvii. 8 ; Vac. Ex. 
3S ; Od. Hor. 4. 

golden- trefled, Pf. exxxvi. 29- 

golden-winged, Od. D. F. I. 57- 

Golgotha, P. L. iii. 477. 

Goliah, 5.^.1249. 

gone, P. L. iii. 544, iv. 994, v. 
91, vi. 670, ix. 1055; P. R. 
ii. 10,39, 116, iv. 459; S.A. 
1350 ; Lye. 37,38 ; Ep. Hobf 
II. 33 ; Pf. lxxxii. 21. 

gone forth, P. L. v. 885. 

gone well, P. L. xi. 781. 

gonfalons, P. L. v. 589. 

good, P. L. i. 159, 163, 165, 
418, ii. 152, 253, 562, 623, 
848, 940, 1033, iii. 310, iv. 
44,48, 109, 110, 203, 222, 
414, 838, 895, v. 63,71,153, 
206,399,471,491,525,570, 
-826, 827, 878, vii. 188, 191, 
249, 309, 337, 353, 395, 512, 
543, 549, 556, 6l6, viii. 93, 
324, 361, 443, 445, 651, ix. 
1 22, 233, 234, 354, 465, 605, 
606,697,698,709,723,752, 
754,756,759,771,774,899, 
967,973, 1072,1139, H54, 
x. 138,618,752,758, xi. 35, 
85, 87, 89, 142, 358, 493, 
616, 685, 710, 809, xii. 47, 
336, 470, 47 1 , 476, 538, 565, 
696,612; P.R. 1.204,381, 
iii. 11, 57, 88, 114, 125, 133, 
139, 21 1, iv. 525, 535; S. A. 
350, 811,867, 1048, 1 l6'3, 
1381,1454, 1537, 1538 ; Lye. 
J 84 ; Arc. 33 ; Com. 277,307, 
489, *97, 609, 658, 665/703, 



704, 740, 764, 765 ; Son. x< 

1, xi. 4, xii. 12, xiv. 5, xxu 

10; Od. D.F.I. 56; Od. on 

Time, 14 ; Od. Sol. Mvf 24^ 

Vac. Ex. 59 ; Ariojl. 4; Hor. 

I. 1; Pf. iv. 15, 26, lxxx. 

70, lxxxiv. 43, lxxxv. 50, 

lxxxvi. 13, 6l. 

as good, P. R. i. 437. 
goodfieft, P. L. iv. 147, 323, 

viii. 304, xi. I89. 
goodly, P. L. iii. 548, viii. 15, 

ix. 576, xi, 509; Com. 968. 
good-morrow, L'Al. 46. 
goodnefs, P. L. i. 218, iii. 158, 

165,688, iv. 734, 847, v. 159, 

vii.l7l,viii.279,647,xi.353, 

xii.469;P.#.iii. 124; 5.^. 

76O ; Com. 849 ; Son. xxiii. 

11 ; Pf vi. 8, lxxxv. 25. 
good-will, P. L. vii. 182, xii. 

477 ; Pf v. 40. 
gor'd, P. L. vi. 387. 
Gordiau, P. L. iv. 348 ; Vac. 

Ex. 90. 
gore, P. L. xi. 460 ; S. A. 1728, 
gorge, P. L. iii. 434. 
gorg'd, P. L. x. 632. 
gorgeous, P. L. ii. 3, v. 250, 

vi. 103, ix. 36 ; P. R. iv. 
114; S. A. 1119; H Penf 

97 ; Com. 777. 
Gorgon, P. L. x. 527 ; Com. 447. 
Gorgonian, P. L. ii. 6ll, x. 

297. 
Gorgons, P. L. ii. 628. 
Goriien, P. L. i. 309. 
gofpel, Son. xvi. 14. 
got, P. /,. i. 365, ix. 594, 1072, 
xi. 87, 579; P. R- ii. 28, 

64; Son. xii. 8; Od.D.F.L 

9; Ep.Hobf 1.6. 
govern, P. L. v. 802, vii. 30, 

510, 546; P. R. iv. L35. 
govern'd, P. />. vi. 706. 
government, P. L. x. 154, xii. 
88, 225; P. i{. iv. 358; 
Cum. 25. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



governows, S. A. 242. 

governs, P. L. ii. 910, vi. 178; 
P. R. ii. 477, iii. 112. 

gourd, P. L. v. 327, vii. 321. 

gowns, Son. xvii. 3. 

grace, P. L. i. 1 11, 218, ii. 238, 
499, 1033, iii. 131, 142,145, 
174,183,187,198,227,228, 
302, 401, 639, iv. 94, 298, 
364, 490, 845, vi. 703, vii. 
573, viii. 43, 215, 222, 488, 
x. 767, 1081, IO96, xi. 3, 
23, 255, 359, 890, xii. 305, 
478, 525 ; P. R. i. 68, ii. 34, 
176, iii. 142, 205, iv. 312; 
I7AI. 124; Arc. 104; Com. 
243, 451, 938 ; Son. vii. 13 ; 
Vac. Ex. 10 ; Pf. lxxx. 13, 
29, 77, lxxxiv. 42, lxxxvi.54. 

grac'd, P. L. xi. 168. 

graceful, P. L. ii. 109, viii. 600, 
ix. 459, x. 1066 ; P. H. ii. 
157. 

graces, P. X. ii. 762, iii. 674, 
v. 15 ; P. R. ii. 138 ; S.^.360, 
679; Ep.M, Win. 15. 

Graces, (the) P. L. viii. 6l ; 
HAL 15; CW986. 

gracious, P. L. iii. 144, v. 134. 
viii. 337, 436, x. 118, 1047, 
xii. 271; S. A. 1173; Pf 
lxxxvi. 1. 

gracioufly, PfAxxxv. 1, lxxxvi. 
20. 

gradual, P. L. v. 483, ix. 112. 

grain, P. L. iv. 8 17, v. 285, 
430, vi. 515, viii. 17, ix. 
450, xi. 242, xii. 184; S. A. 
408 ; II Pen/. 33 ; Com. 750. 

grand, P. L. i. 29, 122, ii. 507, 
iv. 192, v. 149, x. 427, 
1033 ; P. R. i. 159. 

grand-child, P. X. x. 384, xii. 
153, 155. 

grandeur, P. R. iv. 110. 

grandfire, 6'ow. xxi. 1. 

granges, Com, 175. 

grant, P. £. v. 831 -, Com, 36 1 ; 



Pf. ii. 16, Ixxxi. 44; lxxxvi. 

23. 
granted, P. jR. ii. 302. 
granting, P. I». iv. 104 ; S. A, 

773. 
grants, P. L. xii. 238. 
grape, P. L. iv. 259, v. 307, 

344 ; Com. 46. 
grapes, Pf. lxxx. 56. 
grapple, P. it. iv. 567. 
grafp, P. L. iv. 989; Com. 357. 
grafped, P. L. i. 66'7' 
grafping, P. L. vi. 836. 
grafs, P. L. iv. 350, vii. 310, 

315, ix. 450, 502 ; Com. 624 ; 

Od.Nat. 215. 
grafly, P. L. iv. 601, v. 391, vii. 

463, ix. 186, xi. 324, 433; 

P. P. ii. 282; Cow. 280. 
grate, P. L. ii. 881 ; Lye. 124. 
grateful, P. L, iv. 55, 165, 647, 

654, v. 645, vi. 8, 407, vii. 

512, viii. 55, 650, ix. 197, 

580, xi. 323, 442, 864; S.A. 

926. 

more grateful, P.L. iv. 331, 

viii. 606. 
gratefully, P. L, viii. 4, xi. 370. 
gratify, P. L. x. 625. 
gratitude, P. L. iv. 52 ; P. R. 

iv. 188. 
gratuiate, P. R. iv. 438 ; C<w?. 

949. 
gratulating, P. L. ix. 472. 
gratulation, P. L. viii. 514. 
grave, P. L. ii. 300, 91 1, fti. 

247, 259, iv- 844, x. 185, 

635, 786, xi. 585, 662, xii. 

423 ; P. R. iv. 26l ; S. A. 

102, 868; Com. 110, 472, 

870; Son. xiv. 6; xxiii. 2 ; 

Od. Nat. 234; £/>. ikf. Win. 

47 ; P/*. v. 28, vi. 10, lxxx viii. 

12, 20. 
gravely, P. L. iv. 907. 
graven, P. L. i. 716, xi. 573. 
graver, Vac. Ex. 30. 
graveft, P. #. iv. 218. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



gray, P. L. iii. 475, iv. 598, 
v. 186, vii. 373, xi. 540, xii. 
22/ ; P. 11- i. 498, iv. 427 ; 
Lye. lS7;L'AL7l;^rc.54>' 9 
Com. 392. 

gray-fly, Lye. 28. 

gray-headed, P. L. xi. 662. 

gray-hooded, Cotn. 188. 

graze, P. L. vii. 404, ix. 571, 
x.711. 

grazed, P. L. i. 486. 

graz'd, Cow/. 152. 

grazing, P. L. iv. 253, xi. 558. 

great, P. L. i. 24, 62, 118, 294, 
348,358,378,718,794,798, 
ii. 137, 202, 258, 385, 392, 
452,515, 527, 722,922, iii. 
167,271,311,576,6*28,606, 
696, iv. 62, 63, 212, 684, v. 
171,184,188,311,350,454, 
544, 560, 583, 609, 660, 663, 
691,701,706,760,769,833, 
vi.95, 257, 303, 311, 675, 
702, 775, 799, vii. 70, 98, 
135,180,193,267,281,294, 
307, 346, 353, 363, 38 1, 391 , 
500,557, 567,588,602, viii. 
72, 90, 151, 278, 635, ix. 
195,669,672,745,815,843, 

022, x. 236, 284, 306, 350, 
440, 456, 469, xi. 19, 225, 
226,251,314,346,391,410, 
450, 695, 720, 790, 833, xii. 
59, 141,225,244,378,467, 
503,56*7,600,612; P. P. 1. 
70, 136,145,158, 174, 210, 
240, ii. 1C1, 412, 426, iii. 
39, 73, 74, 299, iv. 45, 169, 
252; S.J. 28,32, 243,436, 
523; 1118,1315,1356,1430, 
1439, 1499, 1500, 1537, 
1756; VAl. 60; Are. 33, 
36; Com. 868; Son. vii. 14, 
xxiii. 3; Od.Nat. 120; Od. 
Cir. 21; Ep. W. Sk. 5; Hot. 
III. 1 ; jyTj. 4, iv. 7, viii. I, 

23, Ixxxii. I, lx xxiii. 29, 
ixxxvi. 33, 45, ixxxviii. 20. 



greater, P.L. i. 4, 25S, v. 172, 

vi. 199. vii. 145, 347, 359 f 

604, 607, viii. 29, 87, ix. 

621, x. 515, xii. 242, 533 ; 

P. R. i. 279, ii- 482 ; S. A. 

1357, 1644; Arc. 104; Od. 

Nat. 83. 

no greater, P. R, ii. 27. 
greateil, P. L. i. 367, 695, ii. 

29, x.247, 528; P.P. i. 69, 

ii. 139, 208; S. A. 1131; 

Cum. 28. 
greatly, P. L. x. 193, xi. 869, 

xii. 557, 558. 
greatnefs, P. L. ii. 257, iii. 

165, viii. 557; P.P. ii.418. 
Grecian, P. L. iv. 212. 
Greece, P. L. i. 739, iv. 240, 

270, 338, 360; x. 307; 

Com. 439. 
greedier, P. R. iv. 141. 
greedily, P. L. ix. 791, x. 560. 
greedy, P. L. ix. 257 ; Od. on 

Time, 10; Pf. lxxxiii. 55. 
Greek, P. L. ix. 19; P. K.iii, 

118; .So#. xi. 14. 
green, P. L. iv. 133, 325, 458, 

626, v. 480, vii. 316, 337, 

402,46*0, 479, v 'iii. 286, 6*31, 

xi. 435, 858, xii. 186; P. R. 

ii. 185, iv. 435, 5^7; 8. A. 

1735, Li/e. 42, 140; //./ 

58; Ili'tnf. 66; Are. 84; 

CW. 232, 294, 311, 710', 

8.94; Son. ix. 2 ; G& 2VW. 

47,214; Od.JSlay-M. 3; P/' 

lxxx. 41. 
green -ey'd, "Fi/C. E.r. 43. 
greet, P It. ii. 281 ; Od. AV. 

26, 94:0(/. 6« Time, 11; 

£/>. Ji. "ftfto. 24. 
greeting, P. L. vi. 18$. 
greves, S. A. 1121. 
grew, P. L. ii. 705, 720, 784. 

iii. 356, iv. 195, 221, 694, 

vii. 336, viii. 47,470, x. 551, 

561, xi. 152; P. P. i. 208; 
S A. 10*12. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



grew up, S. A, 637. 

griding, P. L. vi. 329. 

grief, P. L. ii. 586', iv. 358, 

ix. 97, xii. 373 ; P. R. i. 

110, iv. 574,; S. A. 72, 179, 

330,659,1562, 1578; Cow. 

562, 565 ; Od. Pajf. 54; P/. 

vi. 14. 
griefs, S. A.617. 
grieve, P. L. i. 167, xi. 754; 

P/ lxxxv. 7. 
griev'd, P. L. iv. 28, xi. 887. 
grieving, P. L. vi. 792. 
grievous, P. L. x. 501, xi. 

776, xii. 508; S.A.69I. 
griev'ft, P. P. i. 407. 
grim, P. L. i. 396, ii. 170, 682, 

804, vi. 236, x. 279, 713, 

xi. 469 ; Lye. 128 ; Od. D. 

F. I. 8. 
grind, P. L. x. 1072; 5. ^. 35, 

ll6l. 
grinu'd, P. L. ii. 846. 
gripe, P. L. vi. 543, xi. 264. 
grip'd, P. L. iv. 408. 
gris-amber-fteam'd,P.P. ii. 344. 
grifly, P. £. i. 670, ii. 704, iv. 

821; P. R. iv. 430; Co?». 

603 ; Od. Nat. 209. 
groan, P. L. iv. 88, vi. 658, ix. 

1001; S.A. 1511. 
groan'd, P. X. xi. 447- 
groaning, P. L. xii. 539. 
groans, P. £. ii. 184, xi. 489; 

So?i. xviii. 5. 
grooms, P. L. v. 356. 
grofs, P. L. i. 491, ii. 570, vi. 

552, 66l, xi. 51, 53, xii. 77; 

Arc. 73 ; Com. 458. 
groffer, P. L. v. 41 6, ix. 1049. 
grofsnefs, 0</. o/i Pzme, 20. 
grots, P. L. iv. 257 ; Co??? 429. 
grottefque, P.L. iv. 136. 
grove, P. L. i. 403, 4l6, iii. 

28, iv. 265, 272, 982, v. 22, 

vii. 537, ix. 418, x. 548; 

P. ii. ii. 184, 289, iv. 244 ; 

IlPenf 29; Arc, 46; Com. 



225 ; Son, i. 10 ; Od. Nat. 
214. 

groveling, S.A. 141 ; Com. 53. 

groves, P. L. iii. 569, iv. 248, 
v. 126, 292, vii. 404, ix. 
388; P.Pt. iv. 38; Lye. 174; 
II Pen/. 133 ; Com. 937 ; 0d. 
May-M. 7. 

ground, P. L. i. 421, 705, 767, 
ii. 929, iii. 179, 350, iv. 216, 
406,702, 731, v. 348, 367, 
429, vi. 71, 242, 388, 478, 
vii. 210, 304, 332, 334, 422, 
442,456,475, 481, 523, 525, 
ix. 497, 526, 590, 1104, 
1151, x. 201,206, 207, 850, 
851, 1054, 1090, 1102, xi. 98, 
106, 202, 262,348, 850, 858, 
86l, xii. 186, 628, 631; 
S. A. 531, 582; Lye. 140; 
IlPaif. 73, 94; Arc. 55; 
Com. 143, 146, 943, 652, 
1001 ; Son. viii. 12 ; Od. Nat. 
158; Pf. lxxxiv. 22. See 
Under Ground. 

ground-neft, P. P. ii. 280. 

grounded, P. L. viii. 572 ; S. A. 
865. 

grounds, P. L. ii. 126; Pf. 
iv. 35. 

grow, P. L. i. 691, ii. 31, 220, 
iv.98, 216,761, v. 477,618, 
ix- 6*23, 803, 1105, xi. 5, 
274, xii. 352, 400; Com. 
378, 735, 9i>6 ; Son. xi. 10, 
xviii. 10; Pf. lxxx. 39, 
lxxxii. 8. 

grow up, S. A. 676, 1496. 

growing, P. L. ii. 315, 7o7, iv. 
438, ix. 202, 8?7, x. 244, 
715, xii. 164; P. P. i. 227; 
Son. ix. 7. 

growling, P. L. i. 280, x. 177. 

grown, P. X. ii. ?6l, 779, v i» 
66l, ix. 564, 742, 807, 
1154, x. 529, xii. 11 6, 164, 
351; P. R. iv. 137; S. A. 
260 ; Com. 968 ; P/. vi. 22. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



grows, P. X. iii. 356, iv. 425, 

v. 72, 319, viii. 32 J, ix. 208, 

617, 776 ; Lye. 78 ; Cow. 

467, 891 ; Pf i. 7, lxxxviii. 

38. 
growth, P. X. i. 6l4, iv. 629, 

v. 319, 635, ix. 113, 211 ; 

P. R. i. 67; Cow. 270. 
grudging, Cow. 725. 
grunfel, P. X. i. 460. 
gryphon, P. X. ii. 943. 
guard, P. X. ii. 1033, iv. 280, 

vi. 412, viii. 559, xi. 122; 

Com. 42, 394, 487, 695 ; 

So;*, viii. 4. 
guarded, P. X. ii. 947- 
guardian, Com. 219- 
guardians, P. X. iii. 512, xi, 

215. 
guards, P. X. ii. 6ll, iv. 550, 

862, x. 18, xii. 590, ix.269; 

S.A. 1617. 

Gucndolcn, Com. 830. 

guerdon, .Lye. 73. 

guefs, P. X. viii. 85 ; S. A, 

1540; Com. 201, 310. 
guefs'd, P. X. v. 290 ; Cow. 

577. 
gueft, P. X. v. 313, 351, 383, 

507, vii. 14; 69, 109, viii. 

646; P. R. ii. Xj/e. 118. 
guefts, P. X. xii. 166, 167; 

S.A. 1196. 

Guiana, P. X. xi. 410. 

guide, P. X. ii. 975, iii. 194, 

iv. 442, v. 91, vi. 711, viii. 

298, 312, 613, ix. 646, 808, 

x. 146, xi. 371, 674, 785, 

xii. 204, 482, 490, 647; 

P. R. i. 336, ii.473; 6'. A. 

1428, 1630 ; Cow. 32, 171, 

911 ; Son, xxii. 14. 
guided, P. X. vii. 15, viii. 486 ; 

P. R. i. 250; S. A. 1547 ; 

Cow. 570 ; Son. xvi. 3. 
guides, P. L. v. 708, xii. 362 > 

Cow. 279. 



guiding, S.A.I; II Penf. 53. ' 
guile, P. X, i. 34, 121, 646, ii. 

41, 188, iii. 92, iv. 349, ix. 

306, 466, 733, 772, x. 114; 

P. R. i. 123, ii. 237 ; S. A. 

989- 
guileful, P. X. ix. 567, x. 334; 

Cow. 537 ; Pf. v. 16. 
guilefully, P. X. ix. 655. 
guiles, P. R. ii. 391. 
guilt, P. X. ix. 971, 1043, 

1114, x. 112, 166, xii. 443; 

P. it. iii. 147; S. A. 902; 

Cow. 456. 
guiltlefs, P. X. ix. 392, x. 823, 

824 ; Com. 829- 
guilty, P. X. iii. 290, iv. 313, 

ix. 785, 105S, x. 340; Od. 

Nat. 39 ; Vac. Ex. 96 ; Pf. 

v. 29. 
guife, P. X. i. 564, xi, 576; 

Com. 962. 
gulf, or gulph, P. X. i. 52, 

329, ii. 12, 441, 592, 1027, 

iii. 70, v. 225, vi. 53, ix. 72, 

x. 39, 253, 366, xi. 833. 
gulphy, Vac. Ex. 92. 
gummy, P. L. x. IO76. 
gums, P. L. iv. 248, 630, xi, 

327; Cow. 917. 
gurge, P. L. xii. 41. 
gum, P/: cxiv. 18. 
gufhing, P. X. xi. 447 ; Xye. 

137. 
gufi, P. X. x. 565, 698; Xyr. 

93; //Pew/. 128. 
gymnick, S.A. 1324. 
gyves, 6'. ^/. 1093. 



II. 



habergeon, S. A. 1120. 
habit, P. X. iii. 643, P. /?. iv. 
6()1 ; S. A. 122, 1073, 1305. 
habitable, P. X. viii. 157- 
habitant, P. X. viii. 99, x. 58S% 



VERBAL INDEX 



Habitants, P. X. ii. 367, iii. 
460 ; Com. 459. 

habitation, P. X. ii. 573, vi. 
876, vii. 622; P. P. i. 47; 
Com. 339; Pf. vii. 27- 

habitations, P. X. vii. 186, xii. 
49. 

habits, P. X. iii. 490 ; iv. 68 ; 
Cow. 157. 

habitual, P. X. x. 588. 

Habor, P. P. iii. 376. 

Hades, P. L. ii. 964. 

Haemony, Com. 638. 

hag, Cow. 434. 

Hagar's, Pf. lxxxiii. 23. 

hail, P.L. i. 171, 250, ii. 589, 
iii. 1, 412, iv. 750, v. 205, 
385, 388, vi. 589, x. 698, 
1063, xi. 158, xii. 181, 182, 
379 ; P. P. ii. 67, iv. 633 ; 

11 Pen/. 11, 12; Com. 128, 
265; Od. MayM. 5; Vac. 
Ex. 1. 

hail'd, S. A. 354. 

hair, P. X. ii. 710, iii. 640, v. 
131, vii. 323, 497; 5.^.59, 
1135, 1355, 1496;iyc. 69; 
Com. 863 ; Od. Hor. 4. 

hairs, S. A. 1136 ; Com. 392. 

hairy. P. X. iv. 135; Lye. 104 ; 
L'Al. 112; II Pen/. 169. 

hal'd, P. X. ii. 596. 

half, P. X. i. 598, 617, 649, 
ii. 941, 942, iv. 112, 494, 
495, 782, 785, 820, 903, v. 
95, 229, 559, vi. 325, 770, 
853, vii. 21, 463, viii. 595, 
ix. 141, 545; S. A. 9; Arc. 

12 ; Com. 724 ; S071. xix. 2 ; 
Od. Nat. 170 ; Vac. Ex. 4. 

half-dead, S. A. 100. 
half-glad, Ep. Hob. I. 6. 
half-loll, P.L. ii. 975. 
half-moons, P. P. iii. 309. 
other half, P. X. iv. 488, v. 
560. 
half-raifd, P, X, v . 12. 



half-regain'd, L'AL 150. 
half-round, S. A. 1606. 
half-rounding, P. L. iv. 862. 
half-fpied, P. L. ix. 426. 
half-flooping, P. L. ix. 427. 
half-ftarv'd, P. L. x. 595. 
half-funk, P. L. vi. 198. 
half-told, i7Pe«/. 109. 
half-way, P. X. iv. 777, vi. 128. 
hall, P. X. i. 762, 791, ix. 38, 

x. 444, 522, 667 ; Com. 45 ; 

649, 835 ; Od. Nat. 148. 
halleluiah, P. X. x. 642. 
halleluiahs, P. X. ii. 243, vi. 

744, vii. 634. 
halloo, Com. 226, 481, 487, 

490. 
hallo w'd, P. X. iii. 31, iv. 964, 

v. 321, vii. 592, xi. 106; 

P.P. iii. 116; S.A. 535; 

II Pen/. 138 ; Arc. 55 ; Od. 

Nat. 28 ; Pp. W. Sk 3. 
halls, Cow. 324. 
halt, P. X. vi. 532. 
Kamath, P. X. xii. 139. 
hamlets, L'AL 92. 
hammer'd, S. A. 132. 
Hammon, Od. Nat. 203. 
hamper, S. A. 1397. 
hand, P. X. i. 732, ii. 3, 369, 

727, 738, 775, iii. 455, iv. 

365, 417, 488, v. 17, 344, 

641, vi. 3, 139, 231, 579- 

683, 807, vii. 224, 500, viii. 
27, 300, ix. 344, 385, 438, 
780, 850, 892, 997, 1037, x. 
140, 458, 772, xi. 28, 93 t 
248, 276, 372, 421, 436, 
P. R. i. 171, ii. 144, 429, 
449, iii. 168, 187, iv. 59; 
256 ;S. A. i. 359, 507,668, 

684, 951, 1105, 1159, 1230, 
1233, 1302, 1581;^rc.77; 
Com. 397, 711, 903; Son. 
xv. 9, xviii. 13, xxii. 7; Od. 
Nat. 222; Od. D.F.I. 23; 
Pf. ii. 6, viii- 17? lxxx. 70, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



lxxxi.59,lxxxri. 34,lxxxviii. 
23, 49, cxiv. 4, cxxxvi. 37, 
86. 
hand-in-hand, P. L. iv. 321, 
689, v. 395, xii. 648; Pf. 
lxxxv. 44. 

at hand, P. L. ii. 674, iv. 
552, vi. 537, vii. 202, viii. 
199; P- &• »• 35, 238; 
S.^4. 1306; Pf. lxxxv. 38. 
each hand, P. X. i. 222, v. 
252, vi. 307, 770,xi.659- 
either hand, P. L. vi. 800, 

xii. 637. 
in hand, Pf. i. 10. 
kft hand, P. L. x. 322. 
right hand, P. L. ii. 174, 
633, 869, iii. 279, v. 606, 
864 ,vi. 154, 747, 762, 835, 
892, x. 64, xii. 457 ;L^/. 
32 ;Pf. Ixxx. 61,69. 
to hand, S. A. 142. 
handed, P. L. iv. 739- 
handling, P. P. i. 489- 
handmaid, Od. Nat. 242. 
handmaids, Son. xiv. 10; P/*. 

lxxxvi. 60. 
hands, P. L. i. 459, 686, 699, 
ii. 712, 9*9, iv. 629, v. 214, 
854, vi. 458, 508, 646, viii. 
362, 469, 470, ix. 203, 207, 
246, 623, x. 373, 1002, 
1058, xi. 669, 863; P. JR. 
i. 370, iv. 557; S.A. 259, 
1185, 1260, 1270, 1299, 
1526, 1584; Com. 13, 143, 
875 ; Od. Pajf. 45 ; Vac. Ex. 
90 ; Pf. vii. 9, lxxxi. 23, 
lxxxii. 3, 14, lxxxiii. 31, 
lxxxviii. 40. 
hang, P. L. ix. 798 ; Lye. 147. 
banging, P. L. ii. 1051, ix. 

622. 
hangs, P. L. ii. 637, v. 323 ; 

Ep.M. IVin.M. 
hap, P. L. ii. 837, ix. 56, l60, 

•1/21 ; Vac. Ex. 68, 83. 
haplefe, P. L. ii. 549, v. 879, 



vi. 785, ix. 404, x. 342, 
965; Lye. 164; Com. 566; 
Ep. M. Win. 31 ; Od. Hot. 
12. 

haply, P. L. i. 203, iv. 8, 378, 
vi. 501, xi. 196; 5.^. 62. 

happen, S. A. 1424 ; Vac. Ex. 
13. 

happen'd, P. L. ix. 1147. 

happens, P. R. i. 334. 

happier, P. L. ii. 24, 97, 446, 
507, 775, v. 76, vii. 117, viii. 
282, ix. 697, x. 237, xi. 88, 
xii. 464, 465, 587; P. A. iii. 
179 ;Od. Nat. 108. 

happieft, P. L. iv. 317, 638, 
774, x. 904; P.P. iii. 225; 
S. A. 171 8; £o/i. xiii. 11. 

happinefs, P. X. i. 55, ii. 563, 
iii. 450, iv. 417, v. 235, 504, 
vi. 741, 903, vii. 632, viii. 
^65, 399, 405, 621, ix. 254, 
340, S19, x. 725, xi. 58; 
P.P. i. 417; Com. 343, 789. 

happy, P. L. i. 29, 85, 141, 
249, ii. 224, 347, 410, iii. 
66, 232, 417, 532, 567, 632, 
679, iv. 60, 128, 247, 339, 
370, 519, 534, 562, 727, v. 
74, 75, 143, 234, 364, 504, 
520, 536,611, 830, vi. 226, 
viii. 200, 285,331,512,621, 
633, ix. 326, 337,347,975, 
1138, x. 485, 720, 874, xi. 
270, 303, 593, 782, xii. 6*05, 
642; P.R. i. 1, 360, 416, 
iv. 362; S. A. 354, 1049; 
Com. 592, 977 i Od. Nat. 
1, 167; Od. Cir. 3; Pf. ii. 
28, Ixxxiv. 17, 19. 

happy-making, Od. on Time, 
18. 

thrico happy, P. L. iii. 570, 
vii. 625,631. 

Haran, P. L. xii. 131. 

harangues, P. L. xi. 66'3. 

1 lamp ha, S. A. 1068, 1081. 

harbinger, P. L. ix. 13, xi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



589;P.#. i.7l, 277 ;S. A. 

721 ; Od. Nat. 49; Od. May- 

M. 1 ; Pf. lxxxv. 54. 
harbour, P. X. i. 185, v. 99, ix. 

288; P.R. iii. 100; 5.^. 

459 ; F«c. £*. 88. 
harboured, P. ii. i. 307. 
hard, P. X. ii. 255, 433, 444, 

1021, iii. 21, 200, 575, iv. 

45, 432, 584, 932, v. 564, 

vi. 452, 495, 622, viii. 251, 

x. 468, 751, 992, xi. 146; 

P. R. i. 264, 343, 469, 478, 

iii. 132, iv. 478; S.A. 865, 

1013, 1528 ; Lye. 92 ; Com. 

972 ; Son. xvii. 6, xx. 5 ; 

Od. Pafs. 14 ; Pf. lxxxv. 3. 

too hard, Od. Pafs. 14. 
hard-befetting, Com. 857. 
hard-by, P. X. i. 417, x. 548 ; 

UAL 81 ; Cow. 531. 
harden'd, P. X. iii. 200, vi. 

791. 

more harden'd, P. X. xii. 
194. 
hardening, P. X. i. 572. 
harder, P. X. ii. 1016; 6'. A. 

1014 ; Sow. xi. 8. 
hardeft, P. P. ii. 168. 
hardihood, Com. 650. 
hardly, P. X. ix. 304 ; P. Jfc. i. 

279. 
bardmip, P. Jl. i. 341. 
hardy, P. X. ii. 425, iv. 920 ; 

S. A. 1274. 
harlot-lap, P. L. ix. 1060. 
harlot's, P. i*. iv. 344. 
harlots, P. L. iv. 766. 
harm, P. X. iv. 791, 843, 90 1, 

vi. 656, vii. 150, ix. 251, 

326, 327, 350, 1152, x. 

X055; S.A. 486, 1187; Jl 

Penf 84; Com. 591. 

no harm, P. R. ii. 257. 
harrn'd, P. R. i. 311, ii. 407. 
harmlefs, P. X. iv. 388, 458 ; 

Com. 166. 
Jiarmonick, p. £. iv, 687, 



harmonies, P. X. vii. 560; Cow. 

243. 
harmonious, P. X. iii. 38, vii. 
206, viii. 106 ; P. R. ii. 362. 
harmony, P. X. ii. 552, v. 625, 
vi. 65, viii. 384, 605, x. 358 ; 
P. JR. iv. 255; Arc. 63; 

Od. Nat. 107, 131 ; Vac. Ex. 
51. 
harms, Arc. 51 ; £o«. viii. 4. 
harnefs'd, P. X. vii. 202. 
harp, P. X. ii. 548, iii. 414, v. 

151, vii. 594, xi. 560, 583; 

Od. Pafs. 9 ; Pf lxxxi. 8. 
harpies, Com. 605. 
harpies', P. R. ii. 403. 
harping, Od.Nat. 115. 
harps, P. X. iii. 365, 366, vii. 

37,258,450,559; P. R. iv. 

336 ; Od. -So/. ITm/. 13. 
harpy-footed, P. X. ii. 596. 
harrafs, S.A. 257* 
harrow'd, Com. 565. 
Harry, Son. xiii. 1. 
harm, P. X. ii. 882, ix. 987; 

S. A. 662, 1461 ; Lye. 3 ; 

Com. 477 ; Od. So/. Muf 20. 
harfhly, P. X. xi. 537; Com. 

683. 
hart, P. X. xi. I89. 
harveft, P. X. iv. 981, xi. 899; 

S. A. 1024. 
harveft-queen, P. X. ix. 842. 
hafte, P. X. i. 357, ii. 838, iii. 

500, iv. 560, v. 136, 211, 

308, 326, 331, 686, 777, vii. 

105, 294, viii. 519, x. 17, 

456, xi. 104, 449, xii. 366; 

P.R. iii. 437; S.A. 1027, 

1441; VAl. 25; Arc. 58; 

Com. 568, 920, 956; Od. 

Nat. 23; Vac. Ex. 17; Pf 

vii. 5. 

in hafte, P. ii. iii. 303 ; S. A f 
1678; X'-4Z. 87; Dante II. 
5 ; P/: vi. 23. 
hailed, P. X. iii. 714, vi. 254, 

vii. 291, ix. 853, xi f 81. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Jiafon, P. X. iii. 329, v. 846, 
x. 857 ; S. A. 576. 

haften'd, P. X. i. 675; S. A. 
958; Ep.Hobf. II. 14. 

haftening, P. X. xii. 637; Ep. 
M. Win. 46. 

halting, P. X. iv. 353, 867, vi. 
85; P. P. iv. 64; Son. vii. 3. 

hafty, P. L. i. 730. 

hatch, P. X. vii. 418. 

hatching, P. X. iii. 378. 

hate, P. X. i. 58, 107, 417, ii. 
120, 249, 336, 577, iii. 298, 
300, iv. 37, 69, 99, v. 738, 
vi. 559, 734, vii. 54, ix.466, 
471, 475, 491, 492, 1123, 
x. 114, 906, xi. 553, 601 ; 
P. R. iv. 386 ; S. A. 400, 
790, 839, 939, 966, 1266; 
Com. 760 ; Son. i. 9; Pf. 
lxxxi. 6l, lxxxiii. 7. 

hated, P. X. xi. 702, xii. 411 ; 
P.P. i. 47, iv. 97; Son. xi. 
13; Od. D.F.I. 51. 

hateful, P. L. i. 620, ii. 859, 
iv. 505, vi. 264, ix. 121, x. 
869 ; Com. 92. 

hatefulleft, P. X. x. 569. 

hates, P. X. ii. 857. 

hating, P. R. iv. 97. 

hatred, P. X. i. 308, ii. 500, 
x. 928 ; S. A. 772. 

hat'ft, P. X. vi. 734 ; Pf. v. 14. 

have, P. X. i. 608, iv. 485, 66l, 
v. 377, 558, 628, vi. 626, 
818, viii. 281, 408, ix. 274, 
280, x. 501, 1004, 1030, xi. 
99, xii. 558; P. R. i. 146, 
165, 377,379, 382,391, ii. 
33, 46, 52, 67, 131, 182, 
193,307, 437; iv. 56, 116, 
531, 553; S. A. 72, 174, 
211, 215, 318, 377, 379, 
444, 449, 451, 484, 497, 
4Q8, 907, 93?, 994, 1096, 
1104, 1128, 1132, 1323, 
1347, 1453, 1457; Lye. 57, 
1Q0; Arc. 43, 104; Com. 



530, 814, 821, 888, 967 i 
Son. i. 8, vii. 13, x. 9, xvii. 
1 1, xxii. 3, 10 ; Od. Nat. 26, 
239; Od.Pafs. 35; Ep. M. 
Win. 48; Vac. Ex. 12, l6; 
Ep.Hobf. I. 9; Od.Hor. 14; 
Arioji. 3 ; P/. ii. 12, v. 32, 
vi. 20, vii. 7, 9, 11, lxxxi. 
64, lxxxiii. 31, Ixxxvi. 6, 
27, 52, 58, lxxxviii. 71. 

haven, P.R. iii. 321. 

having, P.R. i. 259. 

havock, P. X. ii. 1009, vi. 449, 
ix. 30, x. 617. 

haughty, P. L. iv. 858, vi. 109, 
ix. 484; S.A. 1069; Com. 33. 
more haughty, P. X. v. 852. 

haunt, P. X. iii. 27, iv. 184, 
vii. 330, xi.271, 835; P. R. 
ii. 296; IlPenf. 138; Co???. 
388. 

haunted, P. X. iv. 708 ; L'AL 
130; Od. JVatf. 184. 

haunts, P. P. ii. 191 ; Com. 
536. 

haut, P/ lxxx. 35. 

hawthorn, UAL 68. 

haycock, VAl. 90. 

hazard, P. X. i. 89, ii. 453, 
455, 473, iv. 933, v. 729, 
x. 491 ; P.P. i. 95; S. A. 
1241. 

hazardous, P. R. iii. 228. 

hazel, Xyc. 42. 

he, P. X. i. 34, 84, 87, 143, 
257, ii. 689, iv. 104, 297, 
299, viii. 312, ix. 137, 143, 
151, 1 52, 346, 352, 509, 750, 
758, 950, x. 65, 85, 95, 164, 
]90,191,209,494,497,798, 
1047, xi. 318, 320, xii. 228, 
246, 369, 393, 402, 405, 41 1 , 
419; P. R. i. 76, 88, 106, 
121,124,146,147,150, 186, 
193, 239, 286, '299, 303, 3 19, 
337,346, 367, 36*8, 371, 373, 
412,497; ii. 13, 39,40,40, 
54,95, 96, 98,99, 101^ 120. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

198,199,201,205,231,235, 1155, x. 133, 181, 44£, 499 

263, 266, 270, 271, 273,'277, 523, 732, 735, 815, 934, 955, 

285,288,291,297,337,465, 1032, 1035, xi. 534, 864, 

466,472, iii. 40, 41,64, 67, xii. 150, 388, 430, 432; 

110, 144, 147, 150, 187, 251, P. R. i. 55, 60, 82, 98, 267, 

310,438, iv. 26, 288, 294, ii. 64, iv. 48, 406, 407; 

299,306,325,394,447,449, S. A. 119, 192, 197, 535, 

541, 556, 561, 571, 610, 609,727,1024,1125,1636, 

626; S.A 58, 115, 118, 135, 1639 ; Lye. 51, 102, 147, 

178, 274, 315, 337, 369, 370, I69 ; L'Al. 145 ; II Pen/. 71 j 

465, 663, 1070, 1074, 1075, Com. 355, 744, 799, 836, 885, 

1156, 1157, 1250, 1253, 898, 934; Od. Nat. 80; 

1255, 1256, 1264, 1277, Od. Pafs. 15 ; Od. D. F. I. 

1284, 1309, 1350, 1377 49; Ep. M. Win. 41; Vac. 

1480,1534,1580,1582,1589, Ex. 64; Pf. iii. 9, vii. 58, 

1623, 1626, 1630, 1635, Ixxx. 44 ; Pf. cxiv. 8. 

1637, 1650, 1675, 1687, headlong, P. L. i. 45, 750, ii. 

1749, 1755; Lye. 10, 12,91, 374, 772, vi. 864; P. R. iii. 

107, 110, 167, 175, 188; 430, iv. 575; Com. 568, 887; 

L'Al 20, 104 ; II Pen/. 28 ; Od. Pafs. 5. 

Com. 24, 29, 56, 217, 381, heads, P. L. i. 435,459, ii. 178, 

383,488,533,572,614,623, iv. 35, 699, vi. 653, 757, 

624, 630, 632, 638, 650, 840, x. 1040; P. R. i v. 463; 

653 ; So?i. viii. 5, 7, xix. 6, S. A. 242, 552, 679, 1589, 

xx. 13; Od. Nat. 10, 12, 1652, 1696; Pf lxxxiii. 8.' 

45, 83, 216, 221 ; Od. Pafs. headftrong, P. R. ii. 470. 

12; Od. Cir. 10, 18; Od. heal, P. L. ii. 401 ; Arc. 51 . 

D. P. I. 10, 17, 19, 76 ; heal'd, P. L. vi. 344, 436, viii. 

JEp. M. Win. 19, 21 ; Fac. 468. 

Ex. 36, 79, 80, 81; Ep. healing, P. L. ix. 290; S.A, 

Hobf I. 4, 6, 7, 13, 15, II. 605 ; Com. 621. 

2, 4, 10, 15, 17, 22, 26, heals, Com. 847. 

28, 29; Od. Hor. 5; ino/?. health, S. A. 554; P/ lxxxv. 

1 ; Hor. I. 1; Eurip. 3; P/I 13, 27- 

i. 7, ii- 8, 11, 25, iii. 11, iv. healthful, P. L. xi. 523. 

16, vii. 5, 49, 51, 55, 56, heap, P. L. i. 215, ii. 590, iii. 

lxxxi. 65, lxxxii. 4, lxxxv. 709, iv. 815, vi. 389; P. R* 

31, 33, 55, lxxxvii. 23, ii. 427- 

exxxvi. 2, 37, 42, 57, 6l, heap'd, P. X. iii. 83, v. 391, 

65, 69, 74,, 78, 85. xi. 668, xii. 338. 

head, P. L. i. 193, 211, 357, heaps, P. L. v. 344, x. 558; 

ii. 672, 711, 730, 754, 758, S. A. 1530; Com. 398, 771, 

943, iii. 86, 220, 286, 319, 799- 

626, iv. 134, 283, 443, 826, hear, P. L. i. 274, ii. 65, 846, 

953, v. 606, 830, 842, 893, iii. 185, 195, 701, iv. 410, 

vi. 346, 350, 556, 6%5 7 779, $66, v. 411, 555, 600, 602, 

vii. 470, viii. 292, 574, 810, vi. 567, vii. 52, 101, 

ix. 184, 189, 428, 499, viii. 3, 204, 208, ix. 281, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



862, 966, x. 27, 731, xi. 31, 
359, xii. 61, 367; P.P. i. 
198, 211, 333, 385,481, 484, 
ii. 83, iii. 349, iv. 123, 254, 
500; S.^. 110, 176,766,845, 
1232, 1424, 1456, 1553 ; Lye. 
36; UAL 41, 147, II Pen/. 
64, 74 ; Arc. 72, 104 ; Com.. 
91, 343, 458, 480, 792; 
San. xx. 11; Od. D. F. I. 
37; Vac, Ex. 68; Pf. iv. 6, 
18, v. 3, 6, lxxxi. 3, 33, 45, 
lxxxiv. 29, lxxxv. 21, 30, 
lxxxvi. 2. 

heard, P. L i. 275, 331, ii. 
290, 477, 519, 580, 993, iii. 
710, iv. 2, 681, v. 546, 557, 
659, vi. 28, 208, 557 , 6l8, 
769, 782, 867, 909, vii. 51, 
68, 181, 221, 296, viii. 10, 
203, 205, 242, 452, 500, ix. 
518, 888, 1128, x. 23, 97 t 
99,116,119,163,729,954, 
1047, xi. 74, 153, 252, 266, 
322, 560, 663, xii. 103, 529, 
598,624; P.P. i. 259, 270, 
330, ii. 3, 33, 107, 182, 235, 
362,403, iv. 116,502,513; 
S. A. 215, 649, 1082, 1449, 
1515, 1524, 1631; Lye. 27, 
87; II Pen/. 137; Com. 44, 
227, 252, 264, 533 ; Son. i. 
6; Od. Nat. 53, 101, 183; 
Od. Cir. 3; Vac, Ex. 65; Pf. 
iii. 12, vi. 18, lxxxi. 20. 

heard'ft, P. L. vii. 56l. 

hearers, Ep. Hobf. II. 19- 

hearing, P. L. vii. 118; Pf. 
lxxxvi. 20. 

hearken, P. L. iii. 9^; P.R.U. 
428; Com. 169, 625; Pf. 
lxxxi. 33, 46. 

hearken'd, P. L. ix. 1134, x. 
198. 

hears, P. L. vii. 100, x. 506; 
Lye. 176; 11 Penf. 47. 

hear'ft, P. L. iii. 7, v. 224. 

heart, P. L. i. 18, 151, 400, 



444, 571, 788, iv. 154, 4S4, 
86l, vi. 113, 346, 350, vii. 
60, 114, 150,486, 513, viii. 
266,322,475,590, ix. 189, 
550, 734, 845, 876, 913, 955, 
x.6, 357, 358, 915,940,966, 
973 , 1061, xi. 27, 92, 150, 
288, 448, 494, 595, 866, 887, 
xii. 25, 193,274, 524; P.P. 
i. 216, ii. 103, 169, 410, iii. 
10; S*A. 298, 487, 609, 
1368 ; Son. i. 3, xxii. 8 ; Od' 
Cir. 2S ; Ep. W. Sk. 10; Pf. 
iv. 15, 31, vii. 42, viii. 11, 
lxxxiv. 7, lxxxvi. 39, 43. 

hearten'd, S.A. 1317- 

heart-grief, S. A. 1339. 

heart-fick, P. L. xi. 482. 

heart-ftruck, P. L. xi. 264. 
one heart, P.£. viii. 499, ix, 
967. 

hearth, S. A. 566 ; II Penf. 82 ; 
Od. Nat. 190 ; Vac. Ex. 60. 

heart's, P. L. viii. 451,xii.6l3. 

hearts, P. L. v. 448, 532, x. 
1091, 1103, xi.4, xii. 4S9 ; 
P. JR. i. 222, 463, ii. 162 ; 
S. A. 455, 792, 1613, 1669 ; 
Od.Nat.9*;Od.D.F.I.62; 
Pf iv. 20, vii. 39. 

heat, P. L. i. 453, ii. 219, iv. 
668, v. 231, 369, 437, ix. 
1108, x. 6l6, 653, 656,691, 
1037, 1077, xi. 589, 899, 
xii. 634; Com. 358,917- 

heath, P. L.\. 615. 

heaths, Cum. 423. 

Heathen, P. L. i. 375, x. 579 
P. R. ii. 443, iii. 176, 418 
S.A. 451, 693, 1430; PJ, 
ii. 18. 

heathenifl), P. R. iii. 419. 

heave, P. L. xi. 827 ; S. A. 
197, 1626; L'Al. 145. 

heaved, II Penf 136. 

heav'd, P. L. i. 211. 

Heaven, P. /,. i. 27, 136,212, 
255, 509, 517, 633, ii. 14, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



102, 110, 268, 273,298,310, 
316", 328, 343, 358, 397, 836, 
1004, 1006, 1047, iii. 88, 133, 
146, 257, 26l, 335, 347, 381, 
390, 552, 572, 657, 685, 729, 
iv.29, 78,208,371,539,676, 
722, 1009, v. 44, 362, 700, 
vi. 7, 11, 13, 114, 164,272, 
273, 291, 303, 406, 563, 564, 
737, 749, 783, 868, 878, vii. 
86, 146, 151, 167, 205, 232, 
274, 283, 288, 358, 499, 574, 
617, viii. 66, 70, 79, 88, 120, 
172, 178, 257, 483, 488, ix. 
99, 103, 107, 123, 124, 534, 
604, 811, x. 17, 125, 467, 
59$, 638, 647, 889, 914, 933, 
xi. 194, 335, 681, 740, 849, 
901, xii. 618; P.R. i. 30, 
55, 81, 87, 281 ; iii. 62, 65, 
iv.383;S.A.l49; I I Pen/. 
171; Com. 419, 486, 489, 665, 
938,970, 1023 ; Son. xxi. 11 ; 
Od. Nat. 19, 147 ; Od. Pafs. 
32; Od. D.F. 1.33, 48, 6l, 
63 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 14. 
all Heaven, P. L. iii. 136, 
216,272, vi.217,585,669, 
viii. 511 ; P. R. i. 168, 
237; II Pen/. 166; Od. 
Nat. 108. 
for Heaven, P. L. i. 244, iv. 

372, vi. 62, xi. 7. 
from Heaven, P. L. i. 37, 
491,680, 74.1, iii. 323, iv, 
571, 581, v. 55, 240, 311, 
383, 542, vi. 379, 640, 868, 
vii. 1, 131, viii. Ill, ix. 
334, x. 184, 648, xi. 142, 
441,457, xii.35, 270,391, 
485,504,545; P.R. i. 32, 
284, 289, ii. 137, 312, iv. 
273, 512, 539, 598, 605, 
620 ; S. A. 23, 525, 565, 
• 1134, 1212, 1217, 1438; 

Cum. 81; Pf. lxxx. 58. 
in Heaven, P. L. i. 43, 82, 
263,270, 360, 638, 651, 



680, 733, 749, ii. 25, 37, 
46, 247, 251, 346, 479, 
090,749, 768,819, iii.218, 
274, 322, 371, 416, 477, 
691, 701, 737, iv. 2, 41, 
837, 886, 904, 944, 997 ', 
v. 163,283,330,426,456, 
554, 608, 659, 707, 742, 
810, 8l6,vi. 184, 208,259, 
263, 375, 524, 698, 705, 
776, 814, 893, 897, vii. 43, 
54, 99, 124, 180, viii. 160, 
210, 224, ix. 488, x. 5, 57, 
69, 375, 481, xi. 879, xii. 
59, 361, 458, 463, 579% 
P. R.'i. 182,249,253,420, 
iii. 68, iv. 382; Lye. 84; 
L'Al. 12 ; Com. 198 ; Son. 
xxiii. 8 ; Pf. ii. 8. 

of Heaven, P. L. i. 30, 73, 
104, 124, 171, 174, 255, 
316, 321, 439, 610, 635 9 
654, 669, ii. 11, 18, 129, 
194, 229, 430, 457, 509, 
538, 687, 696, 759, 772, 
833,860,925,1025,1035, 
iii. 1,60,71,205,358,427, 
503, 515, 716, iv. 355, 456, 
531, 552, 620, 649, 97 6 9 
993, v. 251,254, 361,374, 
519, 560, 575, 586,635, 
644, 765, 790, 824, 837, 
863, vi. 51, 77, 168, 203, 
.228, 359, 474, 672, 685 y 
855, 860, 865, vii. 63, 162, 
256, 340, 344, 349, 390, 
viii. 16,92, 181, ix. 8, 176, 
273, x. 321, xi. 372, 825, 
xii. 34, 347,380,509; P.R. 
i. 78, 416, iv. 410, 455 ; 
S.A. 10, 1046, 1509 ; Com. 
94,417,600; Sow. vii. 12. 

to Heaven, P. L. iii. 356, 
517, iv. 688, v. 80, vii. l6o, 
329, viii. 613, 652, xi. 14, 
143, 554, 864, xii. 44, 
4?9;P.JR.ii.l7;CW.303, 
455, 777 ; Son. xviii. 10. 



VERBAL INDEX 



tvith Heaven, P. L. ii. 9, 
977, v. 432, vii. 511, xi. 
66 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 26. 

heavenly, P. L. i. 6, 138, 36l, 
ii. 499, 757, 813, 824, iii. 19, 
213, 217,298, iv. 118,361, 
686,711, v. 286,316, 397, 
500, vi. 165, 723, 788, vii. 7, 
39, 69, 210, viii.217, 356, 
379, 453, 485, 592, 6l5, 646, 
ix. 151, 457, 607, 730, 1082, 
x.624,641,xi. 17,207,208, 
230, 871, xii. 256; P. R. i. 
28, 221, iv. 637; S.A.373, 
635, 1035; Com. 459, 515; 
Son. ix. 4 ; Od. tfflf. 15, 100 ; 
Od.Paf.3-, Od. D.F.I. 55; 
P/. lxxxv. 47- 

heavenly-born, P. L. ii. 860. 
too heav'nly, P. L. x. 872. 

heavenly-guided, Od. on Time, 

Heaven of Heavens, P. L. iii. 
390, vii. 13, 553, xii. 451 ; 
P. R. i. 366, 410. 

heaven-banifh'd, P. L. x. 437. 

heaven-bom, Od. Nat. 30. 

Leaven-fallen, P. L. x. 535. 

Heaven-gate, P. L. iii. 541, v. 
198, vii. 618, x. 22, 88. 

Heaven-gates, P. L. i. 326, ii. 
996. 

heaven-gifted, S. A. 06. 

heaven-lov'd, Od. D. V. I. 65. 

Heaven-towers, P. L. xii. 52. 

heaven-warring, P. L. ii. 424. 

Heaven's, P. L. i. 131, 297, 
510,612, 682, ii. 57,62,137, 
166, 1 90, 236, 264,319, 353, 
359,398,490,692,715,751, 
851,992, iii. 395, 484, 4S6, 
iv. 41,6*8, 111, 060,973, v. 
19,220, 467, 583,676,7X0, 
vi 2,267,425,480,712,716, 
tii. 215. 373,381, 585, viii. 
100, x. 387, 389. xt. 68, 25 1 ; 
P. R. i. 20, n. 121 ; S.A. 
$49,632; L'/c. 31 ; U Pen/. 



70; Cow. 243; Sow. xxiL7$ 

Od. Nat. 2, 10, 1 16, 130, 201, 

240 ; Od. Pafs. 44 ; Od. Qir. 

10; Od.Sol. Muf. 1; Vac. 

Ex. 34, 44. 
Heaven's King, P. R. i. 421. 
Heavens, P. L. i. 9, iii. 9, 390, 

651, v, 156, 578, vii. 562, 

566, viii. 76, 115, ix. 103, 

125, x. 692, xii. 371, 549; 

Pf. viii. 3, 9, 21, exxxvi. 18. 
heavier, P. L. iii. 159, iv. 101, 

ix. 57, x. 835. 

much heavier, P. L. x. 836. 
heavieft, P. L. vi. 265 ; S. A*- 

445 ; Od. PaJ'. 13. 
heavinefs, Ep, Hohf. II. 22. 
heavy, P.L. ii. 902, vi. 551, x. 

741, xii. 103, 531 ; Lye. 37 ; 

Od. on Time, 3. 
Hebe, Vac. Ex. 38. 
Hebe's, UAL 29 ; Com. 290. 
Hebrew, P. II. iv. 336 ; S. A. 

1319, 1540, Pf. exxxvi. 50. 
Hebrews, S. A. 1308. 
Hebrides, Lye. 156. 
Hebron, 5. ^. 148. 
Hebrus, Lye. 63. 
Hecat', Com. 135. 
Hecate, Com. 535. 
Hccatompylos, P. JR. iii. 287* 
hedger, Co?n. 293. 
hedge-row, L'^/. 58. 
hedges, Pf. lxxx. 49. 
heed, P.L.x. 1030; S.^.1230; 

L'Al. 141. 
heel, P. L. v. 284, x. 181,498, 

xii.385,388,433, 631;£\^ 

140; Lye. 34. 
heels, P. L. ii. 135 ; P. I*, ii. 

420; S.A. 1235. 
heinous, P. L. ix. 929, x. 1 ; 

S. ,4,493, 991. 
heir, P.L. v. 720, vi, 707, 708, 

887; P.H. iii. 405, iv. 633; 

Com. 501 ; Od. Nat. Il6' r 

Ep.M.l!i,t.3; Ep.lV.Sh.5. 
held, P. L. 1. 200, 508, 6l8 P 



VERBAL INDEX. 



734, 755, ii. 417, 76l, iii- 
643, 690, iv. 860, 887, v. 82, 
83, 771, vi. 2, vii. 100, ix. 
443, x. 411, 800, xi. 6.93; 
P. R. i. 221, iii. 33, iv. 10; 
S. A. 410, 863, 1081, 11.94; 
IlPenf. 26, 41; Arc. 24; 
Com. 834; Son. xii. 7, xvii. 
2; Od.D.F. I. 14; Vac. Ex. 
51. 
held on, P. X. ix, ISO. 
Helena, Cow. 676. 
Helicon, Pp. M. JFi». 56. 
Hell, P. X. i. 251, 255,666, ii. 
49, 61, 84, 135, 167, 268, 
293,313, 326, 433, 459, 541, 
554, 644, 671,676, 7 19, 723, 
788, 1002, iii. 70, 255, 332, 
678, iv. 20, 75, 78, 358,381, 
918, v. 450, 542, vi. 276,291, 
867, 874, 876^ ix. 467, 476, 
487, x. 322, 365, 392, 437, 
598; P.R. i. 46; IlPenf. 
108 ; Od. Nat. 139, 218 ; Pf 
lxxxvi. 47. 

from Hell, P. X. ii. 1029, iw> 
21,889,v.225,x.39,257; 
P. R. i. 409. 
in Hell, P. X. u 262, 263, 
270, 691, 751, ii. 32, iii. 
322, iv. 909, 937, vi. 183, 
186,705, x.57; P. P. i. 
420, iv. 623. 
of Hell, P. X.i.28, 151, 255, 
315,345,381, 405, ii. 176, 
519, 631, 918, iii. 82, iv. 
89,795,871,967, viii. 231, 
x. 230,288, 299, 408, 6l6, 
621,636, xii. 42; P.R.i. 
180, iii. 220. 
lo Hell, P.X.i. 418, iii. 160, 
223, iv. 12,508,823,914, 
x.305, 346; P. R. i. 153, 
ii. 12S ; Com. 518. 
with Hell, P. X. ii. 383; 
Com. 581. 
hell-born, P. £. ii. 687- 
hell-doom'd, P. L. ii. 697, 



Hell-fire, P. X. ii. 364. 
Hell-gate, P. X. ii. 725, 746*, 

x. 415. 
Hell-gates, P. X. x. 282, 369. 
Hell-hounds, P. X. ii. 654, x. 

630> 
Hellefpont, P. X. x. 309. 
hellifh, P. X. ii. 504, 735, iii. 

298, 300, vi 636, ix. 409, x. 

5S5, 873; P. P. i. 175; iv. 

422; Com. 613. 
Hell's, P. X. i. 542, ii. 510, x. 

594; P.R. i. 116. 
helm, P. X. vi. 543, xi. 245. 
helmed, P. X. vi. 840 ; 0</. Nat. 

112. 
helmet, & ^. 1119. 
helmets, P. X.vi. 83; S.A 141. 
helms, P. X. i. 547, iv. 553, vi. 

840; S.A. 1045; Sow. xvii. 3. 
help, P. X. iv. 727, viii. 418, 

450, ix. 336, 624, x. 137, xi. 

165 ; P.P. iv. 103; S.A. 

1266; Com. 303 ; Son. xvi, 

13, xx. 4; Pf. iii. 23, lxxxii. 

16, lxxxvi. 6*4. 

no help, Pf. iii. 6. 

without help, S.A. 1625, 
help'd, P. X. vi. 656. 
helpful, Arc. 38. 
helping, Com. S45. 
helpleis, 5. A. 644, 943 ; Cow. 

402, 583. 
hem, P> X. iv. 979 ; ^>'c. 33. 
hemifphere, P. X. iii. 725, vii. 

250, 384, ix. 52, xi. 379. 
hence, P. X. i. 260, iii. 731, i v. 

522, 872, vi. 275, 288, vii. 
• 366, x. 200, xi. 3 15, xii. 557, 

590,617,619,621; P. P. i. 

336, ii. 56, 317 i S.A. 15, 

224,1229,1263,1447, 1481, 

1572, 1731; Lye. 18; UAL 

1 ; ft Pen/. 1 ; Com.. 441, 696, 

824; Od.D.F. I. 67. 

from hence, P. X. iii. 540, 
723, v. 257, viii. 332, ix. 
6l7,x.304,xi.356;.4rc.3. 



TOL. 1. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



henceforth, P. L. i. 187, 643, 
iii. 414, iv. 378, 4S6, <)(>6\ v. 
77, 881, vii. 569, ix. 79.9, 
1081, 1140, x. 379, 872, xi. 
170,547,771, xii. 11,561 ; 
P. R. i. 142, 456, 462, iv. 
610 ; S.A.967; Lye. 183. 
herald, P.R.Yi. 279; %c. 89. 
heraldry, Od. C*>. 10. 
herald's, P. L. ii. 518. 
heralds, P. i.i. 752, xi. 660. 
herb, P. i. iv. 253, 644, vii. 
310, 336, viii. 254, ix. Ill, 
186,206,572, x. 204, 711, 
xii. 184 ;S. A. 626; II Pen/. 
172; Com. 541, 621. 
herbs, P. L. iv. 709, vii. 317, 
viii. 527, x. 603; S. A. 1727; 
UAL 8*5 ; Com. 255. 
Herculean, P. L. ix. 1060. 
herd, P. L. iv. 396, 652, vi. 
856, ix. 522, xi. 647 7 xii. 19, 
481 ; P. R. ii. 287,288, iii. 
49, iv. 630; Com. 152. 
herdman's, Lye. 121. 
herds, P. L. ii. 494, iii. 44, iv. 
754, vii. 462, ix. 1109, xi. 
.557, xii. 132; P. P.iii.260; 
Lye. 46; Com. 731, 844 ; P/! 
viii. 19. 
herdfman, P. X. ix. 1108. 
here, P.L.i. 71, 258, 260,321, 
ii. 86, 314, 328, 697, iii. 266, 
458, 600, 606,^61 1, 613,659, 
iv. 235, 251,416, 703, 708, 
884, v. 69, 74, 294, 373, 500, 
778, vi. 12,258, 292, vii. 157, 
541, 548, viii. 118,277,311, 
322, 381, 528, 530,532, ix. 
1 24, 230, 476, 542, 648, 77$, 
806, 1084, 1149, 1174, x. 
104,235,375,600,725,745, 
1007, xi. 178, 180,317,322, 
350, 368, 459, .002, 602, 78(), 
xii. 2, 144, 270, 616; P.P. 
i. 324, 338, 351, ii. 143,249, 
,311,313, 316, 416, iii. 
145, 269,275, iv. i) f 9 } 281, 



466,531 5 S.A.9, 74,323, 
326, 337, 435, 479, 488, 573, 
807,1308,1380, 1443, 1446, 
1520,1521,1549,1552,1721; 
Arc. 7 ; Com. 7, 40, 169, 334, 
483, 497, 502, 579, 61 1, 667, 
668,672,699,818,901,905, 
960,968,972; Od.Nat. 12, 
106,239; Od. Paf 45; Od. 
D.F.I.49,6*;Ep.M.mii. 
53, 55; Vac. Ex. 7; Ep. 
Hob/. I. 1, 2, 4, II. 1 ; P/ 
vii. 23, lxxxviii. 36. 

here and there, P. R. iii. 263 ; 
Com. 936. 

hereafter, P. L. iii. 444, vii. 
488, viii. 79, xii. 156 ; P.R. 
i. 164, iv. 625. 

hereby, P. L. iv. 672; S. A. 
106. 

hereditary, P. L. xii. 370. 

herein, P. P. iv. 356 ; S.A. 6l. 

hereof, S. A. 1145. 

hereticks, Pore. 0/ Con. 11. 

Hermes, P. L. iii. 603, iv. 717> 
xi. 133; 17 P™/: 88; Co;/?. 
637. 

Hermione, P. L. ix. 506. 

hermit, Com. 390. 

hermitage, // Pen/. 168. 

Hermon, P. L. xii. 141, 142. 

Hero, Od. PaJ. 13. 

Herod, P. R. ii. 424. 

heroes, P. L. i. 552, xi. 243; 
S.A. 1131; Vac. Ex. 47. 

heroick, P. L. i. 557, ii. 549, 
iv. 551, vi. 66, ix. 3 4,25,29, 
32,40,485, xi. 69O; P. ii. 
i. 15, 216; S.A. 125, 318, 
527, 1279, ITU. 

heroic kly, S. A. 1710. 

herfe, Ep. M. Win. 58. 

Hefebon, P. £. i. 408. 

Hefperian,P. L. i. 520, iii. 568, 
iv. 250, viii. 632 ; Com. 393. 

Hefperides, P.R. ii. 357- 

Hefperus, /\ L. iv. 605, ix. 49 ; 
Cum. 982. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



hew, Com. 994. 

hewing, P. L. xi. 728. 

hewn, P. L. i. 293, v. 759, vi. 
449. 

hid, P. L. i. 673, 68S, iii, 39, 
624, 707, iv. 278, 497, vii. 
600, viii. 126, 167, ix. 76, 
436, x. 100, Il7,7i6,xi. 316, 
579, 6'99; S. A. 89; Com. 
239, 571 ; Od. Nat. 80 ; Od. 
D. F. I. 32 ; Ep. W. Sh. 3 ; 
Pf. lxxxv. S. 

hidden, P. L. ii. 271, vi. 442, 
516; L'AI. 144; Com. 248 , 
415,416,418. 

hide, P. L. iv. 35, vi. 555, ix* 
90, 162, 1090, 1092, 1113, 
x.723,974,xi.6S,lll;P.P. 
iii. 21; S.A. 1749; II Pen/. 
141 ; Son. xix. 3 ; Od. Nat. 
39; Od. D.F.I. 49; Pf 
Ixxxiii. 12, lxxxviii. 58, 
cxiv. 8. 

hideous, P. L.i.46,313,ii.l77, 
656, 726, 788, vi. 107, 206, 
577, xii. 56; P. R. i. 362; 
6'. ^. 1509 ; Lye. 6l ; Cow. 
520; Od. Nat. 174; P/. 
lxxxviii. 24. 

hides, P. L. i. 27; Com. 383. 

hie, Pf. lxxxviii. 55. 

hierarch, P. L. v. 468, xi. 220. 

hierarchal, P. L. v. 701. 

hierarchies, P. X. v. 591, 692, 
vii. 192. 

hierarchs, P. L. v. 587. 

hierarchy, P. L. i. 737 ; Fore, 
of Con. 7. 

hies, P. L. ii. 1055. 

high, P. L. i. 98, 132, 161,212, 
304, 366, 463, 528, 733, 749, 
756, ii. 1,62,111,319,343, 
359, 472, 558, 635, 874, 909, 
iii. 58, 77, 116, 126, 146, 
205, 254, 31 1, 369, 503, 533, 
655, iv. 30, 90, 95, 181,219, 
226, 28*, 359, 371, 395, 546, 
551, 099, 809, 544, v. 90, 



174,220,289,290,458,46/, 
543, 563, 588, 643, 707, 717, 
732, 757, vi. 26, 71,99,228, 
401, 554, 745, 899, vii. 141, 
] 48, 326, 340, 373, 428, 553, 
viii. 12,50, 55, 101, 121, 126, 
172, 198, 238, 303, ix. 170, 
574,590,602,789,811,812, 
962, 1107, 1122, 1123, x. 13, 
86, 259, 308, 385, 445, 505, 
583, 953, xi. 72, 81,251,562, 
575, 688, 70S, 793, 851, xii. 
240,342,380,401,457,632; 
P. R. i. 37, 142, 229, 232, 
370, ii. 5, 30, 66, 92, 115, 
202, 280, 286, 410, 411, iii. 
26,228, 252,265, iv. 26, 51, 
16'0, 266, 545 ; S. A. 47, 170, 
450, 506, 525, 6S9, 1221, 
1458, 1492, 1599,1606,1612, 
1613, 1740; Lye. 25, 54, 
172; L'AL 56,78, 120; 11 
Ptnf 86, 163 ; Arc. 58 ; Com. 
20,78,516,654, 746, 785, 
956; Son.\i\. 11; Od. Nat. 
10, 148; Od. Cir. 19; Od. 
D. F. I. 39; Ep. M. Win. 1 5 , 
6l ; Eurip. 3; Pf. Ixxxiii. 8; 
Ixxxvii. 1, 20, cxiv. 11. 
as high as, Pf. lxxx. 43. 
on high, P. L. vi. 891; P.P. 
iv.417; Pfiv.17, vii. 28; 
lxxxiv. 45, exxxvi. 93. 
from on high, P. L. ii. 826, 
« vi. 60. 

fo high, P. L. iii. 556, iv. 
49, v. 812, vii. 53, 87,288, 
ix. 940; Com. 798. 

high-arch'd, P. L. x. 301. 

high-bleft, P. L. xi. 145. 

high-built, -S. A. IO69. 

high-climbing, P. L. iii. 546. 

high-em bow'd, II Penf 157. 

high-honour'd, P. L. ii. 54b. 

high-rais'd, Od. Sol. Muf 5. 

high-reaching, P. L. ii. 644. 

high-roof'd, P. R. ii. 293. 

high-feated, P. L. vii. 585. 



i 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

high-tower d, P.R. iii. 26l. 69, 641, 7S -1, vii. 3, 300, viii. 

high-up, Od. Nat. 55, 26*2, 514, ix. 116, xi. IS?, 

MoftHigh, P.P. i. 40, v. 210, 229, 30*7, 377, 381, xii. 

699, vi. 906,vii. 1 82, x. 31, 591, 606, 626 ; P. P. i. 303, 

xi. 705, xii. 120, 36"9, 382; ii. 217, 267, 285, 333, iv. 

P. P. i. 12S, iv. 633; Pf. 247, 447; %c. 23 ; L'AI. 

vii. 04, lxxxii. 22, lxxxiii. 55 ; Com. 295 ; So/*, ix. 4 ; 

67. Od. May-M. 8 ; PC. ii. 13. 

higher, P. £. ii. 72, 300, iv. 50, hill-top, P. L. viii. 520. 

142, 146, 694, v. 422, viii. up-hill, P. L. iv. 777. 

358, 551, 586, 598, ix. 42, hillock, P.P. iv. 254. 

174, 483, 690, 934, xi. 381, hillocks, P. L. vii. 469, x. 860 ; 

xii. 576; P. R. ii. 203, iv. UAL 58. 

198, 258, 546; Lye. 87 ? II hills, P. L. i. 293, ii. 540, -in 

Penf. 22 ; Cow*. 1021 ; Son. 435, iv. 26l, v. 26l, 547, vi'. 

xiii. 12. 528,639,644,663,664,781, 

higher and higher, Pf, lxxxiii. vii. 8, 288, 326, viii. 275, xi. 

55. 575, 740, 829, 852, xii. 146 ; 

higheft, P.L. i. 517, 667, ii. P. P. iii. 26*0, 20*7, 332 ; Lj/c. 

27, 429, 479, 630, 693, iii. 190 ; Com. 424, 927 ; Son. 

305, 657, iv. 51, 182, 195, xviii. 9; Pf. lxxx. 42, cxiv* 

v. 86*5, vi. 13, 112, 114, 205, 12. 

724, vii. 83, viii. 178, ix. 164, hilly, Com. 531. 

683, 1086, x. 889, 1027, xi. him, P. L. i. 44, 127, 203, 238, 

297, 378,693,829, xii. 570 ; 271, 370, 396, 46*7, ii. 231, 

P. R. i. ^, 139, ii. 438, iii. 511, 731, iii. 77y 91, 139, 

30, iv. 106, 549, 553 ; S. A. 343, 400, 477, iv. 54, 386", 

6l, 175, 339, 6*85, 1101 ; 11 436, 799, 810, v. 165, 298, 

Penf. 68. 606, 607, 608, 6l 1 , 835, vi. 

highly, P. L. i. 30, 666, ii. 130, 294, 339, 532, 886, vii. 

387, 845, xi. 170, xii. 308 ; 184, 186, 196,221,259,587, 

P. R. ii. 6*7; S. A. 1148; viii. 16*8, 16*9, 280, 634, ix. 

Ep. M. Win.. 65. 149, 154,727,816,949,1014, 

highth, P. L. i. 24, 92, 282, x. 86,224,226, 376, 402, 485, 

552, 723, ii. 95, 1 90, 324, 533, 76*4, 828, 878, 106"0, 

i<93, iii. 58, iv. 95,138, 564, 1082, 10S4, 1088, xi.49,291, 

vi. 132, 300, 793, vii. 215, 322,330,421,66*8,705,772, 

viii. 413, 430, 454, ix. 167, xii. 1 14, 120, 417, 420, 422, 

510, 675, 677, x/724, xi. 440, 542; P.P. i. 10, 28, 2.9, 

730; P. II. i. 231, ii. 45, 436, 80, 123, 246, 276, 277, 318, 

iv. 39 ; 6'. A. 384, 6*83, 1349; 370, 425, 440, 447 ; ii. 3, 6, 

Arc, 75. 9, 40, 50, 52, 55, 56, 73, 97, 

liightcn'd, P. J,, vi. 6*2.9, xi. 793. 112, 116, 131, 170, 171,26*1, 

hill, P.L. i. 10,231,403, ll6, 266, 276", 298,301,314,425, 

670, 6S9, ii. 4<)5, 557, 941, 472, iii. 6, 6*2, 93, 129, 149, 

in. 28,546,iv. 172, 182,224, 251, 281, 371, iv. 13, 129, 

243, 538, 681, v. 186,203, 130,131,177,301,447,450, 

604, 619,732, 757, vi. 25, 57, 530, 541,573,583, 586, 587> 



VERBAL INDEX, 



604; S.A. 40, 116, 275,329, 
339, 37 1,46*9, 585,708,1067, 
1070,1 147,1247, 1451, 1481, 
1484, 1497, 1499, 1501,1503, 
1580, 1598, l6l6, l6l8,l6'20, 
2623, 16*24, 1629, 1635,1719, 
1733; Lye. 173, 178; UAL 
110; IlPenf.52; Com. 56, 
6l, 81, 576, 651; Son. viii. 
4, x. 6, xix. 11 ; Od. Nat. 
18,32; Od. D.F.I.75; Od. 
on Time, 18; Od. Sol. Muf. 8, 
28; Ep. M. Win. 66; Vac. 
Ex. 78 ; Ep. Ilobf. I. 2, 15, 
17, II. 11, 12, 23 ; P/ iii. 6, 
iv. 18, v. 10, vi. 4, vii. 10, 
11, 14, 40, 41, 47, 48, viii. 
13, 14, 16, 17, lxxxi. 62, 
Ixxxii.l6,lxxxv.37,cxiv.l6. 

himfelf, P. L.i.39, 79,215,219, 
iii. 234, 409, iv. 18,22,397, 
934, v. 353, 665, 774, vi. 238, 
viii. 251, ix. 57, 331, 348, 
673, 895, x. 62, 510, 799, 
845, 878, xi. 820, xii. 6*5, 
70, 76, 91, 228; P. Pui. 76, 
ii. 98, 110, 237, 244, 466, 
471, iii. 139, 140, 144, 147, 
iv. 302, 312, 327 ; S. A. 42, 
121, 130, 299, 309, 346, 347, 
1585, 1658, 1709, 1717; Lye. 
11 ; Com. 385 ; Son. x. 4 ; 
Od.Nat.76, 79,154; iy. iv. 
14. 

hind, P.L. xi. I89. 

hinder, P. L. vii. 465. 

hinder'd, P. L. x. 8^ 

hinders, P. L. ix. 778 ; S. A. 
1533; Hor. II. 2. 

hindmoft, Com. 190. 

hinds, Com. 174 ; Son. xii. 5. 

hinges, P. L. ii. 881, v. 255, vii. 
207; P. P. iv. 415)0^. Nat. 
122. 

Hinnom, P. L. i. 404. 

hippogrif, P. P. iv. 542. 

Hippotades, Lye. 96. 

hir'd, S.A 1H4, 



hireling, Son. xvi. 14. 

hirelings, P. L. iv. 193. 

Hifpahan, P. _L. xi. 394. 

hifs, P. L. i. 768, vi. 212, x. 
508, 543, 546, 573. 

hifs for hifs, P. L. x. 518. 

hitting, P. L. x. 522. 

hift, I£ Pen/. 55. 

hiftorian, P. L. viii. 7. 

hit, P.L. vi. 592; S.A.10U; 
IlPenf. 14; 2*rc. 77; Com. 
286. 

hither, P. L. ii. 857, iii. 445, 
457, 46*3, 698, iv. 796, 908, 
v. 308, vii. 159, 364, viii. 313, 
347, xi. 475, 647 ; P. R. i. 
494, iii. 350 - 9 S.A. 335,821, 
1070, 1445, 1536, 1539 ; Lye. 
134, 139. 

hitherto, P. L. ix. 28, 797 » 
S. A. 1640. 

hitherward, P. L. iv. 794, 

hitting, S. A. 1568. 

hive, P. L. i. 770. 

hoar, UAL 55 ; Arc. 98. 

hoarded, Cow. 739. 

hoarfe, P.L. ii. 287,661, v. 873, 
vii, 25, xii. 58. 

hoary, P. L. ii. 891, xi. 899 i 
Com. 871. 

Hobfon, Ep. Ilobf. I. l, 18. 

hog, Com. 71. 

hogs, Sew. xii. 8. 

hold, P. L. i. 657, ii. 12, 362, 
895, iii. 84, 46l, iv. Ill, 
907, v. 347, 395, 537, 72S, 
vii. 532, viii. 408, x. 135,365, 
406, 751, xi. 635, 900, xii. 
6*8; P. R. ii. 125, iv. 16S, 
232, 480, 494; S.A. 12, 796, 
802, 1349; Lye. 119, 162 ; 
UAL 120 ; II Pen/. 90 ; Arc. 
65 ; Com. 94, 919 ; Eurip. 4 ; 
Pf. lxxxi. 15, lxxxviii. 46. 

holding, UAL 32. 

holds, P.L. i. 124, ii. 497, 54H, 
1043, iv. 26*3, v. 103, 441, 
537, vii. 382 ; P. R. iii. 296, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



iv. 628; S.A. 1369; Cam. 
1005. 
holds on, P. L. xi. 633. 
hole, Com. 338. 
holiday, Com. 959. 
holier, Com. 943. 
holieft, P. L. iv. 759, vi. 724 ; 

P.P. ii. 110. 
Holieft of Holies, P. JR. iv. 

349. 
hollo\v,P.L.i.314,707,ii.H2, 
285, 518, 953, vi. 484, 552, 
578, vii. 257,289; P.H. iv. 
124 ; Son. xvii. 6 ; CM. iVaf. 
102, 178 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 44. 
hollow'd, P. L. vi. 574. 
holocauft, S. ^. 1702. 
holy, P. L. i. 390,683, iii. 1, 
v. 147, 386, 593, 604, 712, 
vi. 272,743, vii.91, 584,594, 
631,ix.8Q9,xi.606, xii.109, 
340; P.H. i. 195,486,489, 
iv. 545; S. A. 362, 497, 
1358 ; II Pcnf. 41 ; Com.246, 
767; Od. Nat. 5, 133, 190; 
Od. Pafs. 41 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 
15; Pf. ii. 13, iii. 12, v. 20, 
lxxxvii. 1. 
holy-day, L'Al 98. 
holy-days, S.A. 1421. 
Holy Ghoft, P.P. i. 139. 
Holy Land, P. L. iii. 536. 
Holy One, P. L. vi. 359, xii. 

248; 6*.^'. 1427. 
Holy Writ, P.P. ii. 8. 
homage, P. P. ii. 376. 

ne, P. 7v. ii. 457, 458, vi. 
622, x. 1085, xi. 154, 692; 
P.P. ii. 79, iv. 639; S. A. 
518, 579, 1733; Cton. 76; 
»S'o/?. xv. 6; P/i l.xxxiv. 15. 
home- felt, Com. 262. 

at home, P. P. ii. 415, iii. 
833, iv. 281 ;5. //. 805, 810, 
917, 1458; Ep. J J ohf. I. 11. 
homely, P. L. x. 605 J Pj/c. 

• ,Con. 748. 
jlomcr, P. iv. iv. 259. 



homeward, P. L. v. 688, xii, 

632. 
homicide, P. L. i. 417. 
honeft, Com. 322. 
honefty, Co???. 69 1 • 
honey, P. L. vii. 492; Pf. 

lxxxi. 68. 
honey-fuckle, Com. 545. 
honied, 6'. A 1066; Lye. 140; 

ZZ Pe?// 142. 

honour, P. L. i. 533, ii. 453, 

iii. 343, 660, 738, iv. 289, 

314, 390, v. 188, 289, 315, 

365, 462, 817, 844, vi. 422, 

676, viii. 58, 508, 577, ix. 

332, 1057, 1074, xi. 617; 

P. P. i. 75, 251, ii. 66, 86, 

202, 227, 422, 464. iii. 95, 

iv. 122, 207, 368; S. A. 

412,449,992, 1101, 1166, 

1178, 1276, 1315, 1360, 

1715; UAL 37; Arc. 27, 

35; Com. 38, 220; Son. vii. 

3, xiii. 10; Od. Nat. 20; 

Od. D.F.I.S; Pf viii. 16, 

lxxxi. 40, lxxxiii. 59, lxxvi. 

42. 

honourable, S. A. 1108. 

honoured, P. P. v. 73, 663, vi. 

8 16, viii. 227,649; P.P. i. 

329; & ^- 939; Lye. 85; 

Co???. 564 ; Son. x. 14 ; P/?< 

M. Win. St', Ep.JV.Sh. 1. 

honouring, P. L. viii. 569. 

honour's, S. A. 372; Cw». 864-. 

honours, P. P. v. 7S0 ; P. Ii. 

iv. 536. 
honour'fl, Son. xiii. 9» 
hoods, P. L. iii. 490. 
hook, Com. 872. 
hooked, Or/. Nat. 56. 
hope, P. L.i. 66,88, 120, 190, 
275, ii. 7, $9, 142, 221,232, 
234,416,498,522,568,811, 
iii. 630, iv. 60, 105, I OS, 
092, 938, 9&>, v. 119, vi. 
131, 287,497,787, vii. 121, 
viii. 209, 481, ix, 126, 25f| 



VERBAL INDEX, 



422, 424, 475, 476, 633, x. 

463, 838, 1043, xi. 138, 

271, 308, 493, 599, 779, xii. 

376, 576; P.P. i. 105, ii. 

30, 57, 58, 165, 417, iii- 

204, 359, iv. 3 ; S.A. 120, 

46'0, 4/2, 647, 838, 1453, 

1455; Lye. 73; Com. 213, 

400, 410, 412 ; Son. i. 3, ix. 

11, xxii. 8; Ep. M. Win. 

25 ; Fore, of Con. 13 ; Dante 

II. 3. 

no hope, P. R. iii. 206. 

without hope, P. X. x. 995. 
hop'd, P. X. iii. 740; P. P. iv. 

578. 
hopeful, P. X. iv. 984, x. 972, 

xi. 543; S.A. 1575. 
hopelefs, P. X. ii. 186, ix.259; 

S. A. 64S ; Son. i. 10. 
hopes, P. X. i. 637, iii. 449, iv. 

808, ix. 985, x. 1011; S.A. 

523, 595, 1504, 1571 ; Od. 

Hor. 11. 
hoping, P. X. vi. 258, x. 339. 
horizon, P. X. iii. 560, vi. 79, 

vn. 871, ix. 52, x. 684; 

Od. Pafs. 23. 
horizontal, P. X. i. 595. 
horn, P. R. ii. 356, iii. 327; 

Lye. 28; X'^/. 53 ; Arc. 57; 

Od.Nat. 203; Dawfe II. 2. 
horn'd, P. X. x. 525, xi. 831. 
horned, Pf. exxxvi. 33. 
hornets, S. A. 20. 
horns, P. X. i. 439, iv. 978, vii. 

366, x. 433. 
horny, P. P. ii. 267. 
Horonaim, P. X. i. 409. 
horrent, P.X. ii. 513. 
horrible, P. X. i. 6l, 137, ii. 

846, vi. 210, x. 472, xi. 465 ; 

S.A. 1649. 
horribly, S.A. 1510. 
horrid, P. X. i. 51, 83, 224, 

392, 563, ii. 63, 644, 676, 

710, iv. 996', vi. 207, 252, 

305, 66$, ix. 185, x. 540, 



789, xi. 465 ; P. R. i. 296, 

iv. 411; S. A. 501, 1542; 

UAL 4 ; Com. 429 ; Od. Nat. 

158; P/ lxxxviii.28. 
horrour, P. X. ii. 67, 220, 616, 

703, iv. 18, 989, v. 65, vi. 

307, 863, ix. 890, x. 539, 

S. A. 1550; Od.Nat. 172. 
horrours, P. X. i. 250, ii. 177, 

x. 843. 
horfe, P. X. ii. 887, x. 590, xi. 

645; P. R. iv. 66; S. A. 

I6l8. 
horfes, P. X. v. 356 ; P. P. iii. 

313. 
Hofanna, P. X. vi. 205. 
Hoianna's, P. X. iii. 348. 
hofpitable, P. X. i. 504, v. 332; 

P.P. iv. 242; Cow. 187. 
hofpital, P. P. ii. 262. 
holt, P. X. i. 37, 136, 541, 635 9 

754, ii. 519, 759, 824, 885, 

993, iv. 606, 922, v. 535, 

583, 710, 744, 874, vi. 38, 

104,214,231,392,527,590, 

633, 647, 830, vii. 132, ix. 

441, x. 259, 437, xi. 230, 

xii. 196, 209; P. R. i. 4l6, 

iii. 300; S.A. 262; Od.Nat. 

21; Od. D. F. I. 57; Od. 

Sol. Miff. 18 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 36, 

cxiv. 10, exxxvi. 65. 
hoftile, P. X. ii. 1040, v. 904, 

vi. 50, 260, xi. 796, xii. 31; 

S. A. 531, 692, 893, 1210, 

1561; Od.Nat. 57. 
hoftility, P. X. ii. 336; S.A. 

1203. 
hotting, P. X. vi. 93. 
.holts, P. X. vi. 800. 
hot, P. X. ii. 898, ix. 467, x, 

694, xi. £68, 845. 
hovereft, Od. D.F.I. 38. 
hovering, P. X. i. 345, ii. 717, 

v. 140, ix. 639, x. 285 ; 

II Pen/. 9', Com. 214. 
hovers, P/I lxxxviii, 27. 
hounds, ZA4/. 53. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



hour, P.L. i. 697, ii. 91, 848, 
934, 1055, iv. 581, 6l0, 779, 
963, v. 170, 330, 6*6*7, vi. 
10, 150, 396\ viii. 213, 512, 
ix. 225, 406*, 596', 739, x. 
93,440,771, 923, xi. 203, 
xii. 589; P. R. iv. 522; 
S. A. 36'4, 1056*; II Pen/. 
85 ; Son. xxi. 14. 

hourly, P. L. ii. 796, 797. 

hour of night, P. R. ii. 260. 

hours, P. L. ii. 527, iii. 417, 
iv. 26'7, vi. 3, vii. 444, viii. 
69, ix. 1188; P.R. i. 57; 
Com. 986'; Son. i. 4; On 
Time, 2. 

houfe, P. L. ii. 823, vi. 877, 
vii. 576, x. 465, xii. 121 ; 
P. R. iii. 175, 282, iv. 273, 
552, 639; S. A. 447, 518, 
9-19,1049,1112,1491,1717, 
1733; Co?n.S5; Od.Nat. 14; 
lip. M. Win. 54; Hor. i. 5 ; 
Pf. v. 19, lxxxiv. 10, \7, 
lxxxviii. 24. 

houfc of God, P. L. i. 470, 
496, xii. 349. 

houfe, (verb) Ep. M. Win. 10. 

houfes, P. L. ix. 446; P. R. 

iv. 56; p/: ixxxiii. 47. 

houfhohJ, P. L. ix. 233, x.908, 
xi. 820; S.A. 566. 

how, P. L. 1. 9, 75, 84, 187, 
188,189,217,611,629,695, 
740, ii. 153,280, 338, 356, 
357, iv. 236, 237, 452, 1012, 
v. 21, 22, 24, 155,226, 227, 
564, 566,715, 783, vi. 901, 
vii. 62, 555, 556, 636, viii. 
526, 45, 250, 277, 280, 448, 
615, jx. 9ft L38, 2()l, 230, 
2SS, 326, 56*3, 686, 698, 761, 
900, 902, 903, 908, 964, 
1053, 1054, 1080, 11 14, x. 
0, 20, 28, 120, 211, 480, 
580,775,777,796", 821, 827, 
p60, 968, 1070, xi. ()% 70, 
282, 284, 46*5, 528, 548, 754, 



7S5, 802, xii. 263, 284; 
P. R. i. 137, ii. 113, 183, 
199,216,270,271,272,348, 
iii. 323, iv. 187, 231, 233, 
311,472; 5.^.48,59,118, 
189,197,204,275,278,419, 
422, 493, 604, 707, 8 19, 854, 
S55, 944, 946, 1148, 1350, 
1415, 1547, 1579, 1583; 
Lye. 113, 117, 119; UAU 
53, 105 ; 11 Pen/. 3 ; Com. 
365, 476, 497, 508, 567, 
581, 6l6, 618, 1020; Son. 
vii. 1; Od. Nat. 22; Vac. Ex. 
36, 53 ; Pf. viii. 23, lxxxiv. 1 . 

however, P. L. iv. 911, v. 258, 
vi. 292, 56*3, ix. 683, 952, 
x. 134, 578, xi. 373; P. P. 
ii. 135, iv. 321 ; S. A. 6*01. 

how far, S. A. 755. 

how many, P. R. ii. 193; S.A. 
194; Pf. iii. 1,2. 

how much, S. A. 16*7 ; Dante, 
I. 1. 

how oft, Od. Ilor. 5. 

how often, P. L. iv. 680. 

howl, P. L. ii. 799 ; Com. 533. 

howl'd, P.L. ii. 658; P. P. iv. 
423. 

hubbub, P. L. ii. 951, xii. 60. 

hue, P.L. i. 230, 527, iv. 14S, 
256, vii. 445, viii. 619, xi. 
557; P. P. ii. 352; II Pen/. 
16; Or!. Nat. 207. 

hues, P. L. iv. 698 ; Lye. 135. 

hug, Com. l64. 

huge, P. L. i. 57, 196, 209, 
547, 710, ii. 434, 473, 709, 
874, vi. 193, 251,364, 552, 
873, vii. 285, 410, 496, x. 
531, xi. 729; P. K. ill- 26*1, 
iv. 51 ; Com. 423 ; Od. Pafs. 
14; Od. Or. 27. 

huge-bellied, P/' rxiv. 11. 
lb huge, S* A. 65. 

hugeft, P. LA. 202, vii, 413. 

hull, P. I. xi. 840. 

hum, UAL 118; Of/. Nat. 174. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



human, P. P. i. 359, 393, 482, 
iii. 44, 402, iv. 206, 475, 
751, v. 227, 459, 518, 565, 
572, vi. 300, 896, vii. 75, 
177, 368, 640, viii. 119, 250, 
392, 414, 587, ix. 197, 241, 
554, 561, 712, 714, 871, x, 
793, 908. xi. 147, 694, xii. 
10, 71 ; P. R. i. 298, 308. 
ii. 137, 246, iii. 231, 402, 
iv. 265, 599; S.A. 690,79%, 
1113 ; II Pen/. 14 ; Arc. 73 ; 
Com. 68, 297; Od. Nat. 126; 
Od. Paff. 14 ; Od. D. F. J. 58. 

humane, P. P. ii. 109, ix. 732; 
P.R.I. 221. 

H umber, Vac. Ex. 99' 

bumble, P. P. ii. 240, vii. 322, 
viii. 378, x. 912, xi. 295; 
P.R. iii. 189; S. A. 511, 
965 ; Od. Nat. 24. 

bumbled, P. P. vi. 342, xi, 
150; P.P. iii. 421. 

humbler, P. L. xii. 193. 

humbling. P. P. x. 576. 

humbly, P. P. x. 1089, HOC 

humid, P. P. iv. 151, v. 425, 
vii. 306, ix. 193; Com. 992. 

humiliation, P. P. iii. 313, x. 
1092, 1104; P. P. i. 160. 

humming, P. R. iv. 17. 

humour, P. P. iii. 610, vi. 332, 
vii. 280; Son. xiii. 8. 

humours, S. A. 600. 

hundred, P. JR. iii. 287; Arc. 
22 ; Son. xviii. 13. 

hundreds, P. P. i. 760. 

hung, P. P. i. 287, 342, ii. 78, 
1005, iii. 367, iv. 250, 302, 
554, vi. 190, 246, 763, vii. 
242, 325, viii. 307, ix. 430, 
594, xi. 247; S. A. 59, 
1736; IlPcnf. 118; Od. Nat. 
122 ; Ep. Hobf. II. 3 ; Od. Hor. 
14. 

hung forth, P. L. iv. 997. 

hung over, P. P. v. 13. 

hunger, P. £. iv. 184, v. 437, 



viii. 213, ix. 586, x. 556, 

568 ; P. P. i. 308, 325, ii. 

252, 255, 319, 333, 373, 389, 

406, iv. 121, 592. 

without hunger, P. P. ii. 
306. 
hunger-bit, P.P. ii. 4l6. 
hunger'd, P. R. i. 309. 
hungering, P. P. ii. 244, 259, 
hungers, P.R. ii. 231. 
hungry, P. P. iv. 403; Lye, 

125. 
hunt, IlPenf. 124. 
hunter, P. P. xi. 188, xii. 33. 
hunting, P. L. xii. 30. 
huntrefs, Cow. 441 ; Brut. 1. 
hurdled, P. P. iv. 186. 
hurl, Com. 153. 
hurrd, P. P. i. 45, ii. 180, 

374, vi. 665, x. 636; Lye. 

155. 
hurling, P. L. i. 669. 
hurried, P. P. ii. 937, v. 778', 

P. P. iv. 402 ; Od. Pafs. 50. 
hurried back, P. P. ii. 603. 
hurt, P. P. ix. 700, 727, xii. 

418; S.A. 1676; Com. 589. 
hurtful, P. L. ii. 259; ^rc. 53. 
hufband, P. P. vii. 490, viii. 52, 

ix. 204, 234, 268, 482, x. 4, 

336, xi. 291 ; S. A. 755, 

883, 940; Son. xxiii. 3. 
hufband's, P. L. ix. 385, x. 

195. 
hum, Cow. 88. 
hulk, P. P. v. 342. 
houfwife's, Com. 751. 
hyacinth, P. P. iv. 701, ix, 

1041; Com. 998. 
Hyacinth, Od. D.F. I. 25, 26. 
hyacinthine, P. L. iv. 301. 
Hyaena, S.A. 748. 
hyaline, P. P. vii. 619. 
Hydafpes, P. P. iii. 436. 
Hydra, Son. xv. 7* 
Hydras, P. L. ii. 628; Com* 

605. 
hydrus, P. P, x. 525, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Hylas, P. P. ii. 353. 

Hymen, P. L. xi. 591 ; L'Al. 

125. 
Hymenasan, P. L. iv. 711. 
Hymettus, P. P. iv. 247. 
hymn, P. X. iv. 944 ; P. P. iv. 

341 ; Son. xiii. 11; Od. Nat. 

17; P/.lxxxi. 5. 
hymning, P. L. iii. 417, vi. 96, 

vii. 258. 
hymns, P. L. ii. 242, iii. 148, 

v. 656, vi. 745; P. P. i. 

169 ; Od. Sol. Muf 15. 
hypocrify, P. L. iii. 683; S, A. 

872. 
hypocrite, P. L. iv. 957 J P- P. 

i. 487. 
hypocrites, P. L. iv. 744. 
Hyrcanian, P. P. iii. 317. 
Hyrcanus, P. R. iii. 367. 



I. J. 

I am, P. L. vii. 168. 
Jabin's, Pf. lxxxiii. 36. 
Jacob, P.P. iii. 510, xi. 214; 

P. R. iii. 377 ; Pf lxxxv. 4. 
Jacob's, P/lxxxi.3, 15,lxxxiv, 

3, lxxxvii. 7« 
jaculation, P. P. iv. 665. 
Jael, S. ^. 989. 
jail, 5. A. 9*9 ; Orf. JNta. 233, 
Iambick, P.P. iv.262. 
jangling, P. P. xii. 55. 
.(anus, P. P. xi. 129- 
Japhet, P. L. iv. 717. 
jar, P. L. v. 793. 
jarr'd, Od. Sol. Muf. 20. 
jarring, P. P. ii. 880, vi. 315. 
jafper, P. P. iii. 363, 519, xi. 

209. 
Javan, 5.^. 7 16. 

, /'. /,. i. 508. 
/'. /;. iv. 402. 
javelin, P. L. xi. 658, 
S. /I. 1*3, n 
P. L. x. 569, 637. 



Iberian, P.P. ii ? 200, iii. 318; 

Com. 60. 
ice, P. P. ii. 591, 600, x. 291, 

697, 1063, xii. 193. 
icy-pearled, Od. D.F.I. 15. 
Ida, P.P. i. 515, v. 382. 
Ida's, IlPenf.29. 
idea, P. P. vii. 557. 
idiots, P. P. iii. 474. 
idle, P. P. iv. 6l7, vi. 839, vii. 

279; S.A. 566, 579; IlPenf, 

4 ; Son. xxii. 4; Od JVfl£. 55, 
idlenefs, P. P. x. 1055. 
idly, P.L. x. 236, xi. 645. 
idol, P. P. i. 396, vi. 101 ; 

S. A. 1672 ; Od. Nat. 207. 
idol-worfhip, P. P. xii. 115; 

S. A. 1365. 
idolatrefies, P. L. i. 445. 
idolatries, P. P. i. 456, xii. 

337; P. P. iii. 418. 
idolatrous, P. P. i. 144; S. A. 

443, 1364, 1378. 
idolatry, S. A. 1670. 
idolifms, P. P. iv. 234. 
idolifts, S. A. 453. 
idol's, S. A. 1297. 
idols, P. P. i. 375, 446, ii. 

329 ; P. P- iii. 426, 432 ; 

S. A. 456. 
jealous, P. P. iv. 503, x. 478 ; 

Son. xv. 3. 
jcaloufies, P. P. v. 703. 
jealoufy, P. P. v. 449; S. A. 

791, 1375. 
Jehovah, P. LA. 386,487, vii. 

602; Pf ii. 24, iii. 11, iv. 

17, 24 y v. 1,6, 37, vii. 29, 

64; viii. 1, 23, lxxxiii. 66. 
Jehovah's, Pf. vii. (>1, cxiv. 5. 
Jephtha, P. JR. ii. 439; S. A. 

283. 
Jericho, P. R. ii. 20. 
Jerafalem, P. R. iii. 234, 2S3. 
jefiamine, P. P. iv. 693 ; Ljjc. 

1 1.;. 
jcir, /////. 26. 
jefter, S. A. 1338. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Jefus, P.L. ix. 183, xii. 310; 
P. R. ii. 3/8, 432. 

Jefus Meffiah, P. P. ii. 4. 

jet, Lye. 144. 

ignoble, P. L. ii. 227, xii. 221 ; 
S. A. 416, 

Jew, P. R. iii. 118. 

jigs, Com. 952. 

ignobly, P. L. xi. 624. 

ignominious, P. L. vi. 395 ; 
S. A. 417. 

ignominy, P. L. i. 115, ii. 207, 
vi. 383 ; P. R. iii. 136. 

ignorance, P. L. iv. 519? ix. 
774, 809; Com. 514. 

ignorant, P. Z. ix. 704, xi. 
764 ; P. P. 300. 

Iliffus, P.R. iv. 249. 

Ilium, P.L. i. 578. 

ill, P. L. i. 160, ii. 224,381, 
445, 462, 935, iv. 48, 222, 
320, 932, v. 113, vi. 150, 
262, 738, viii. 324, ix. 845, 
1055, 1147, H52, x. 735, 
950, 952; P.R. i. 200,321, 
423, ii. 469, iv. 135, 339, 
419, 464 ; S. A. 209; Arc. 
48; Com. 217, 271, 683; 
Dante I. 1; Pf. vii. 10, 58. 

ill luck, Com. 845. 

no ill, P. L. iii. 688, 689, x. 
140. 

ill-boding, P. R. iv. 490. 

ill-fenc'd, P. L. iv. 372. 

ill-fitted, 5. A. 122. 

ill-tbrefeen, P. L. xi. 763. 

ill-founded, S. A. 1504. 

ill-got, Dante II. 4. 

ill-greeting, Cow. 406. 

ill-manag'd, Co??*. 172. 

ill-meaning, S. A. 1195. 

illaudable, P. L. vi. 382. 

liiimitable, P. L. ii. S92. 

ill-join'd, P. L. iii. 463. 

ill-mated, P. £. xi.684. 

ill news, P. ft. i, 6'4. 

lil-fecur'd, P. L. iv. 370. 

ill-worthy, p, £, xi. 163. 



illuminate, P. L. vii. 350, 
illuminated, S. A. 1689. 
illumine, P. L. i. 23. 
illumined, P. L. i. 666. 
illufion, P. L. x. 571 ; Com, 

155. 
illufions, P. L. iv. 803. 
illunrate, P. L. x. 78 ; P. it i. 

370. 
illuftrates, P. L. v. 739- 
illuftrious, P. X. iii. 627? vi. 

773, vii. 109, ix. 962, x. 

367 ;S. A. 957, 1318. 

more illuftrious, P. L. v. 842. 
Illyria, P.L. ix. 505. 
ima^v-P. L. i. 371, 440, 459, 

ii. 764, iii. 63, iv. 292, 472, 

480, 567, v. 95, 784, vi. 736, 

vii. 519, 526, 527, 627, viii. 

221, 424, 441, 544, xi. 508, 

514, 515, 518, 525; P. R. 

iv.596;S.A.706. 
imagination, P. L. vi. 300; 

S. A. 1544. 
imaginations, P. L. ii. 10, v. 

105. 
imagined, P. L. iii. 599> v. 263, 

x. 291,881. 
imagine, Com. 415. 
imagining, P. L. x. 553. 
Imaus, P. L. iii. 431. 
imbalm'd, P. i. ii. 842, xi. 

135. 
imbark'd, P. L. xi. 7<53 ; £. A. 

1045. 
imbathe, Cow. 837* 
imblaze, Com. 733. 
imblaz'd, P. L. i. 538, v. 502. 
imblazon'd, P. X. ix. 34. 
imblazonry, P. L. ii. 513. 
imbodied, P. L. i. 574, vi. 

779- 
imbodies, Com. 468. 
imborder'd, P. L. ix. 43S. 
imbofom'd, P. L. iii. 75, v. S97> 
imbower, P. L. i. 304-. 
imbower'd, P. £. ix. 103S ; 

Qom. 62, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



imbrown'd, P. X. iv. 246. 
imbrute, P. L. ix. 166. 
im brutes, Com. 46S. 
imbued, P. X. viii. 2l6; Son. 

xvi. 7. 
imitate, P. X. ii. 270, v. Ill ; 

Com. 112. 
imitated, P. X. ii. 511; P. H. 

iv. 339. 
imitation, P. X. v. 764, vi. 

662. 
immanacled, Com. 665. 
immature, P. X. vii. 277. 
immcafurable, P. L. i. 549, vii. 

211; S.A. 206. 
immeasurably, P. X. ii. 844. 
immediate, P. X. ii. 121, vi. 

584, vii. 176, viii. 6l7, x. 

52, 1049. 
immediately, P. X. vii. 285, xi. 

477, xii. 87; S.A. 1614. 
immedicable, S.J. 620. 
immenfe, P. X. i. 790, ii. 829, 

iv. 52, v. 88, vi. 704, vii. 

196, 620, x. 300, xii. 469. 
imminent, P. X. vi. 317, ix. 

409, xi.725. 
immortal, P. X. i. 53, 107, 

559, 622, ii. 13, 553, iii. 67, 

267, 353, 373, vii. 77, ix. 

291, 1166, xi. 50, 285, xii. 

435;L'Al. 137; II Pen/. 91; 

Arc. 75; Com. 2, 463, 5l6, 

841 ; -Sow. xiv. 14, xx. 12; 

Od . Sol.Muf. 13; Vac. Ex. 

39 ; Ep. Uobf. 28. 
immortality, P. X. iv. 201, v. 

638, xi.59. 
immoveable, P. X. ii. 602, x. 

303. 
immur'd, Com. 521. 
immures, P. X. ii. 435. 
immutable, P. X. iii. 373, v. 

524, ix. 1165. 
immutably, P.L. iii. 121, vii. 79- 
imp, P. X. ix. 89. 
imp, (verb) Son. xv. 8. 
impair, P. X. vii. 608, xii. 10. 



impair'd, P. X. iv. 850, v. 73, 

665, vi. 6*01, ix. 144; P. £. 

iv. 592 ; Com. 38. 
impal'd, P. X. ii. 647, vi. 553. 
imparadif d, P. X. iv. 506. 
impart, P. X. v. 677, vii. 81, 

ix. 728; P. #. ii. 397, iii. 

124. 
imparted, P. X. viii. 441 ; S. A. 

1438. 
impartial, 5. A. 827. 
imparts, P. X. v. 423 ; P. il. 

i.417. 
impafiable, P. X. x. 254. 
impafliori'd, P. X. ix. 678. 
impaHive, P. X. vi. 455. 
impatience, P. X. x. 1044. 
impearls, P. X. v. 747- 
impediment, P. X. vi. 548. 
impendent, P. X. ii. 177, v. 

891. 
impenetrable, P. X. ii. 647, ix. 

1086. 
impenetrably, P. X. vi. 400. 
impenitence, P. X. xi. 816. 
impenitent, P. il. iii. 423. 
'imperfect, P. X. ix. 338, 345, 

xii. 300; Vac. Ex.3. 
impertedtion, P. X. viii. 423. 
imperial. P. X. i. 536, ii. 310, 

446, v. 584, 801, vii. 585; 

P.R. iv. 33, 51; Com. 21. 
imperious, P.L. vi. 287; #.^. 

1352. 
imperimable, P. X. vi. 435. 
impertinence, P. X. viii. 195. 
impervious, P. X. x. 254. 
impetuous, P. X. i. 175, ii. 

880, iv. 560, vi. 591, xi. 

744; S.A. 1422. 
impious, P. X. i. 43, 342, 686, 

v. 813, 845, vi. 188, 831; 

P.R. iv. 173 1 S.A. 891- 
impioufly, P. X. vii. 6*11 ; 6\ A, 

498. 
implacable, P. X. vi. 658 ; S. A* 

960. 
implanted, P. X. xi. 23» 



VERBAL INDEX. 



implements, P. X. vi. 488, 
implicit, P. X. vii. 323. 
implied, P. X. iv. 307. 
implies, P. X. iv. 901, x. 

1017- 
implor'd, P. X. viii. 377. 
implore, S. A. 521 ; Cow. 903. 
implores, P. X. vii. 38. 
imploring, S. A. 512. 
import, P. X. ix. 731. 
important, P. X. xi. 9 ; S. A. 

1379- 
imports, P. X. viii. 71 ; Cow. 

287. 
importun'd, S.A. 1680. 
importune, P. X. ix. 610, x. 

933; P.P. ii. 404; 5.^. 

775. 
importunity, P.P. iv.24 ; S. A. 

51, 397, 779, 797. 
impos'd, P. X. ii. 241, v. 6?9 , 

vi. 407, vii. 545, ix. 235, xi. 

172, xii. 397; S.A. 565, 

1343, 1640. 
impofe, P. X, i. 567, viii. 30, 

xi. 227; S.A. 1258. 
impofition, P. X. xii. 304. 
impoflible, P. X. ii. 250, iv. 

548, vi. 501, vii. 58, ix. 360, 

x. 800. 
impoftor, P. X. iii. 692 ; Cow. 

762. 
impotence, P. X. ii. 156'; S.A. 

52. 
impower'd, P.X. x. 369 ; P. .R. 

ii. 130. 
impregnable, P. X. ii. 131 ; 

P. JR. iv. 50. 
impregn'd, P. X. ix. 737. 
impregns, P. X. iv. 500. 
imprefs, P. X. iv. 558. 
imprefs'd,P.X. iii. 388, iv. 150, 

vii. 294, xi. 182. 
imprefles, P. X. ix. 35. 
impreffion, P. R. j. 106 : Ep. 

W. SL 12. 
imprifon'd, S. A. 8, 158. 
imprifonment, S.A, 155, 



improv'd, P. X. v. 498, ix. 54. 
improve, P. R. i. 213. 
imprudence, P. X. xi. 686. 
impudence, S. A. 398. 
impudent, P. R. iv. 154 ; Dante, 

II. 3. 
impulfe, P. X. iii. 120, ix. 5S0, 

x. 45; S.A. 223. 
impulfion, S.A. 422. 
impure, P. X. iii. 630, iv. 746, 

vi. 742, x.756; S.A. 1424. 
impurpled, P. X. iii. 364. 
impute, P. X. x. 620 ; P. P. ii. 

248. 
imputed, P. X. iii. 291, xii. 

295, 409. 
imput'ft, P. X. ix. 1145. 
inabflinence, P. X. xi. 476. 
inaceeffible, P. X. ii. 104, iii. 

377, vii. 141; P.P. iii. 274. 
inbreath'd, Od. Sol. Muf. 4. 
inbred, P. X. ii. 587. 
incapable, P. X. ii. 140, v. 505, 

vi. 434. 
incarnate, P. X. iii. 315, ix. 166. 
incenfe, P. X. ii. 94, vii. 599, 

ix. 194,692, xi. 18, 25,439, 

xii. 338, 363; P.P. i. 251. 
incens'd, P. X. ii. 707, iii. 187, 

v. 847, vi. 130, via. 235, ix. 

1162. 
incentive, P. X. vi. 5 J 9. 
inceffant, P. X. i. 698, vi. 138> 

xi. 308 ; Lye. 64 ; Pf. lxxxvi., 

19. 
inceflantly, P. X. iv. 323. 
inceftuous, P.L. x. 602; S.A. 

833. 
incident, 5. A. 656, 774. 
incited, P. X. viii. 125. 
inclement, P. X. iii. 426, x. 

1063. 
inclinable, P. X. ix. 742. 
inclination, P. X. ii. 524, x. 

^65. 
incline, P. X. iii. 402, x. 106l, 

xi. 145; Com, 412; Pf. 

lxxxvi, I. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



inclin'd, P. X. iii. 405, xi. 250, 

596; P.P. iv. 212; S.A. 

lb'36"; Son. xxiii. 13. 
inclines, P. X. ii. 314, iv. 6l5. 
inclining, P. X. x. 46. 
included, P. X. ix. 4l6. 
incompos'd, P. X. ii. 989* 
incomprchenfible, P. X. viii. 20. 
incontinence, Com. 397- 
inconvenient, P. X. v. 495. 
incorporate, P.X. x. 8l6; S.A. 

161. 
incorporeal, P. X. i. 789, v. 

413, viii. 37. 
incorrupt, P. X. xi. 56. 
incorruptible, P. X. ii. 138, ix. 

298, 6'22. 
in create, P. X. iii. 6. 
incredible, P. L. iv. 593 ; S. A. 

1084, 1532, 1672. 
Incubus, P.P. ii. 152. 
incumbent, P. X. i. 226. 
incumber'd, P. X. vi. 874, ix; 

1051 ; Com. 774,. 
incur, P. X. viii. 336, ix. 992. 
incurable, S. A. 1234. 
incurrM, P. X. x. 15. 
incurfions, P. P. iii. 301. 
incurft, P. X. iv. 913. 
Ind, P. X. ii. 2 ; Cow. 606. 
indamagM, P. P. iv. 206. 
indebted, P.X. iii. 235, iv. 57- 
indecent, P. X. vi. 601. 
indeed, P. X. i. 114, ii. 99, iii, 

702, iv. 444, 477, v.706, viii. 

524, ix. 650, 656, 1071, X. 

152, 1036; P.R. ii. 316, iii. 

165, iv.354; S.A. 158,527, 

i ;i-7, 1571. 
indefatigable, P. X. ii. 408. 
indented, P. L. ix. 496. 
India, P. X. v. 339; P. ii. iv. 

74. 
Indian, P. L. i. 781, iii. 435, 

ix. 1108 J P.R. iv. 75; Co///. 

139. 
Indians, P.X. ix. 1102. 
indignant, P. X. x. 311. 



indignation, P. X. ii. 707, vi# 

811, ix. 666, x. 418; P/. 

lxxxv. 15. 
indignities, S.A. 371, 1168, 

1341. 
indignity, P. X. ix. 154; *S.^. 

411. 
indirect, P. X. xi. 631. 
indiflblubly, P. X. vi. 69. 
indite, P. X. ix. 27- 
individual, P. X. iv. 486, V. 

610 ; Od. on Time, 12. 
indors'd, P. P. iii. 329. 
induce, P. X. ii. 503. 
indue'd, P. X. viii. 253. 
inducement, P. X. ix. 934 J 

S. A. 1445. 
induces, P. JR. i. 105. 
inducing, P. X. vi. 407. 
induftive, P. X. xi. 519- 
indulgence, P. X. ix. 1 166. 
indulgences, P. X,. iii. 492. 
indulgent, P. X. v. 883, ix. 3. 
Indus, P. X. ix. 82; P. P. iii. 

272. 
induftrious, P.X. i.75l,ii. Il6, 

viii. 137 ; S. A. 1274. 
ineffable, P.X. iii. 137, v. 734. 
ineffably, P. X. vi. 721. 
ineflfe&ual, P. X. ix. 301. 
inelegant, P. X. v. 335. 
inevitable, P. X. ii. 197, 322; 

S. A. 1587- 
inevitably, P. X. viii. 330 ; 5. A. 

1657. 
inexorable, P. X. ii. 91 ; S. A. 

827. 
inexperience, P. X. iv. 931. 
inexpert, P. X. ii. 52, xii. 218. 
inexpiable, S. A. 839. 
inexplicable, P. X. x. 754. 
inexpreflible, P. X. v. 595, viii. 

J 13. 
inextinguifhable, P. X. ii. ^^ 

vi.217. 
inextricable, P. L. v. 528. 
infallible, P. L. xii. 530 j P.fl> 

iii, 16. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



infam'd, P. L. ix. 797- 
infamous, S.A. 417; Com. 424 ; 

O&D.F.L 12. 
infamy, P. .L. vi. 384. 
infancy, P. P. iv. 508 ; S. A. 

968 ; Od. Nat. 152 ; Od. Cir. 

14. 
infant, P. L. xii. 168 ; P. P. ii. 

78; Son. xviii. 8. 
infant-blood, P.L. ii. 664. 
Infant-God, Od. Nat. 16. 
infant-lips, Vac. Ex. 4. 
infantry, P. L. i. 575. 
infant's, Od. Nat. 222; Od. 

Pqf.3. 
infeft, P. P, x. 608. 
infeded, P. X. i. 453. 
infeftion, P. £. i. 483 ; Od. 

Paf 55. 
infer, P. P. vii. 116 ; Com. 408. 
inferiour, P. P. ii. 26, iii. 420, 

iv. 59, 362, viii. 382, 410, 

541, ix. 825, x. 468; P. P. 

ii. 135; S.A. 73, 672; Arc. 

77; Od.Nat. 81. 
infernal, P. P. i. 34, 251, 657, 

792, ii. 66, 387, 507, 575, 

742, 850, 881, iv. 793, 965, 

xi. 483, 667, vii. 238, ix. 136, 

x. 259, 389, 464; P.P. i. 

107, iv. 422, 6l 8 ; Od. Nat. 

233. 
infers, P. L. viii. 91, ix. 285, 

754. 
infeft, S.^. 423. 
Infidel, P.L. i. 582; 5. ^.221. 
infinite, P. L. i. 218, ii. 405, 

797, iii. 12, 373, 706, iv. 74, 

415, 734, 916 v. 596, 874, vi. 

241, vii. 191, 602, viii. 410, 

420, x. 79^ 802, 907, xi. 

167, 692, xii. 469. 
infinitely, P. L. iv. 414. 
infinitely good, P. L. vii. 76. 
infinitude, P.L. iii. 711, vii. 

169. 
infirm, P. L. v. 384. 
in firmer, P. £. x. 956. 



infirmity, S.A. 776; Lye. 71. 
infix'd, P. L. ii. 602, vi. 837. 
inflame, P. P. ii. 581, ix. 1031 $ 

S.A. 1739. 
inflam'd, P. R. iii. 40. 
inflamed, P. X. i. 300, ii. 630* 

791, iv. 9, vi. 26l. 
inflames, P. L. iv. 818; P. R. 

i. 418. 
inflaming, P. L. ix. 1013, 
inflammation, & A. 626. 
inflexible, S. .4. 816. 
inflid, P. L. i. 96, x. 341. 
infliaed, P. L. ii. 335, x. 51 3 

P. P. i. 54; 5.^f. 1170. 
influence, P. P. ii. 1034, iii* 

118, iv. 669, v.695, vii. 375, 

viii. 513, ix. 107, 309, x. 

662; UAL 122; Com-. 336; 

Od. Nat. 71. 
inform, P.P. iii. 247; Com. 

180. 
inform'd, P. L. iii. 593, vii, 

639, ix. 275; S.A. 1229- 
informidable, P. L. ix. 486 3 

S. ^. 335. 
informing, P. P. xii. 232. 
infring'd, P. P. i. 62. 
infuriate, P. L. vi. 486. 
infus'd, P. P. v. 694, vii, 236, 

viii. 474, ix. 836. 
ingender'd, P.L. x. 530. 
ingendering, P. L. ii. 794, iv; 

809. 
inglorious, P. P. i. 624, iii. 253, 

ix. 141, xii. 220; P. P. iii. 

42; £.^. 580; Od. D.F.I. 

22. 
ingorg'd, P. P. ix. 791. 
ingraft, P. X. xi. 35. 
ingrate, P. P. iii. 97, v. 811 ; 

P.R. iii. 138. 
ingrateful, P. P. v. 407, ix. 

^1164; £. ,4. 697. 
ingratitude, Com. 77S. 
ingredients, P. L. xi. 417- 
ingrofVd, P. P. v. 775. 
ingulf d, P. P. iv. 225, v. 6l4. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



inhabit, P. L. ii. 355, vii. 162, 
inhabitant, P. L.ii. 860, v.46l. 
inhabitants, P. L. iv. 5, viii. 

145. 
inhabitation, 5.^. 1512. 
inhabited, P. X. x. 6"90. 
inherit, 5. ^. 1012. 
inheritance, P. L. ii. 3S ; P. P. 

iii. 382 ; S. A. 1476. 
inhofpitable, P. L. xi. 306; 

5. ^. 989. 
inhofpitably, P. L. xii. 168. 
inhuman, P. L. xi. 511 ; S. A. 

109. 
inhumanly, P. L. xi. 677. 
inimitable, P. £. iii. 508 ; Arc, 

78. 
iniquities, P. JC. xii. 107. 
iniquity, Pf. vi. l6, lxxxv. 5. 
injunction, P. L. x. 13. 
injure, P. L. x. 1057. 
injur'd, P. L. i. 98, v. 450. 
injuries, P. L. x. 925 ; P. ii. 

iii. 190, iv. 387. 
injurious, S. A. 1003. 
injury, P. L. i. 500, vi. 434. 
inlaid, P. L. vi. 758. 
inland, P. L. x. 423. 
inlay, P. £. iv. 701 ; Com. 22. 
inlet, Com. 839- 
inly, P. L. xi. 444 ; P. P. i. 

228, 466, iii. 203. 
inmate, P. L. ix. 495, xii. 166. 
inmix'd, S. A. l65J. 
i?.moft, P. L. i. 16'8, iv. 738, v. 

302, ix. 1048, xi. 418 ; S. A. 

611 ; II Penf. 29 ; Com. 536. 
inn. P.Jt i. 248; Ep. Uobf. I. 

13. 
inner, P. it. ii. 477. 
innocence, P. /,. iv. 318, 388, 

745, v. 445, vi. 401, viii. 501, 

ix.373,41 1,459, 1054,1075, 

xi. 30; Cow. 607, 831 ; 0</. 

D. F. 7. 65 ; P/: vii. 33. 
innocent, /'. L. iv. LI, v. 209; 

i <>m. 702 ; Oil. Nat. 39- 

innumerable, P. i.i. ioj,338, 



699, iii. 147, 565, v. 585, 
745, 898, vi. 82, 508, vii. 88, 
156, 400, viii. 297, ix. 1089, 

x. 268, 507, 896; I LA. 60S; 
Com. 713. 
innumerous, P. L. vii. 455; 

Com. 349. 
inoffenfive, P. X. v. 345, viii. 

164, x. 305. 
inordinate, P. L. iv. 808, xii. 

87. 
inquir'd, P. P. i. 458. 
inquire, P. L. iii. 57 i, viii. 225. 

xii. 362 ; P. P. iv. 42. 
inquifition, P. P. iii. 200. 
inquifitive, S.A. 775. 
inroad, P. L. iii. 421, vi. 387. 
inroads, P. X. ii. 103. 
inroll, Pf. lxxxvii. 23. 
inroll'd, P. L. xii. 523; S. A. 

653, 1224, 1736. 
infatiable, P. P. iii. 148. 
infatiate, P. L. ii. 8, ix. 536. 
infcrib'd, P.P. iv. 335; I#c. 

106. 
infeft, P. i. iv. 704, vii. 476, 

xi. 734. 
infenfate, P. L. vi. 787; 5. A. 

1685. 
infenfible, P. L. viii. 291, x, 

777. 
infenfibly, P. L. vi. 692, viii. 

130. 
infeparable, P. L. x. 250. 
infeparably, P. i. iv. 473; 

S. A. 154. 
infide, P. P. iv. 58 ; Hor. I. 6; 

P/ v. 27. 
infight, P. P. iii. 238. 
infinuating, P. L. iv. 348. 
infifted, P. P. i. 468. 
infolence, P. X. i. 502 ; S. A\ 

1230. 
infolent, 5.^. 1422. 
inflection, p. L. ix. 83. 
infpher'd, CW. 3. 
infpire, P. L. i.7;P,ft.i,ll; 

Od. May-M. 5. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



itifpir'd, P. X. iv. 273, v. 322, 

vi. 155, 503, viii. 476, ix. 

189, x.785, xl 7; P. P. i. 

492, iv. 275, 350. 
infpires, P. X. iv. 154, ix. 23 ; 

Od. Nat. 180. 
infpiring, P. X. iv. 804. 
initant, P. X. vi. 549, x. 210, 

345. 
inftantly, P. X. viii. 458. 
inftead, P. X. i. 553, iii. 45, iv. 

105, 316, vii. 188, x. 538, 

565, 1040, xi. 5, xii. 54 ; 

Com. 529. 
inftill'd, P. X. vi. 269, xi. 4>l6. 
inftind, P. X. ii. 937, vi. 752, 

x. 26*3, xi. 562; S.A. 526, 

1545. 
inftin&ive, P. X. viii. 259. 
inftrucl, P. X. i. 19, x. 1081 ; 

P.P. n439. 
iiiftruaed, P.X. xii. 239, 557; 

S.A. 757; Od. Pajj: 48. 
inft ruder, P. X. v. 546", xi. 

871. 
inftruftion, P. X. vii. 81. 
inftructs, P. X. v. 320. 
inftrument, P. X. ii. 872, vi. 

505, x. 166; P. P. iii. 388. 
inftru mental, P. X. iv. 6*86, vi. 

65. 
inftruments, P. X. xi. 559. 
infufferably, P. X. ix. 1084. 
infult, S.^. 113,944. 
infulting, P. X. ii. 79, iv. 926; 

P. P. iv. 138. 
infults, P. P. iii. 190. 
infuperable, P. X. iv. 138. 
insupportable, P. X. x. 134. 
infupportably, S. A. 136. 
infuire&ion, P. L. ii. 136. 
integrity, P. X. v. 704, ix.329. 
intellect, P.L. vi. 351. 
intellectual, P. X. ii. 147, v. 

485, ix. 483, 768. 
intelligence, P.L. viii. 181. 
intelligent, P. X. vii. 427 J P. P* 

iii. 58. 



intelligential, P. X. v. 408, ix 

190. 
intemperance, P. X. xi. 472 ; 

Com. 975. 
intemperate, Com. 67. 
intend, PL. ii. 457, 713, v„ 

867, x. 58; S.A. 911, 1259. 
intended, P. X. i. 652, viii. 447, 

555, ix. 45, 295, x. 689; 

P. R. i. 61 ; P/ vii. 47. 
intends, P. X. i. 14, ii. 727, 740, 

iv. 898, v. 693, 725, xii. 73; 

Son. xxi. 8. 
intenfe, P. L. viii. 387. 
intent, P. L. I 787, iii. 192, iv, 

810, v. 332, vi. 503, ix. 162, 

462, 786, 1035 ; P. R. i. 291, 

ii. 95, iv. 528; S.A. 1078, 

1754 ; ^rc. 34 ; Fore, of Con. 

9- 
inter, Ep. M. Win. 1 . 
intercede, P. X. xi. 21 ; S. A, 

920. 
intercept, P. X. v. 871, vi. 193, 

ix. 410, x. 429. 
interceffion, P. X. x. 228. 
interceflbur, P. X. iii. 219, x. 

96, xi. 19. 
interchange, P. X. ix. 115. 
intercourfe, P.L. ii. 1031, vii. 

571, ix. 238, x. 260. 
interdict, P. P. ii. 369. 
interdicted, P. X. v. 52, vii. 46. 
interdiction, P. X. viii. 334. 
interfused, P. X. vii. 89. 
interlunar, S.A. 89. 
interminable, S. A. 307. 
intermiffion, P. X. ii. 802, iv. 

102; S.A. 1629. 
intermit, P. X. ii. 462. 
intermits, P. X. ix. 223. 
intermitted, P. X. ii. 173, ix. 

1133. 
intermix, P.L. viii. 54, xi. 115. 
intermix'd, P. X. vii. 598, ix. 

218. 
internal, P. X. viii.46l, ix. 711 j 

S. A. 1334, 16*86*. 



VOL. I. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



interpofe, P. L. ii. 854, xii. 4 ; 

Son. xx. 14. 
interpos'd, P.L. iv. 253, v. 258, 

vi. 336', x. 323, xii. 270; 

P. P. iv. 39- 
interpoies, P. P. iii. 728. 
interpofeft, P.L. ii. 738. 
interposition, iii. 222. 
interpret, P. P. xi. 33. 
interpreted, P. L. v. 762. 
interpreter, P. P. iii. 657, -vii. 

72. 
interpret'^, 5. ^4. 790. 
interrupt, P. P. ii. 371, viii. 

184, ix. 512, xii. 317- 
interrupted, P. L. xi. 286. 
intertwined, P. P. iv. 405. 
interval, P. L. vi. 105. 
intervein'd, P.P. iii. 257- 
intervene, P. L. ix. 222. 
interview, P. X. vi. 555 f xi. 

593. 
intervolv'd, P. L. v. 623. 
interwove, P. L. i. 621 ; Cow. 

544. 
interwoven, P. P. ii. 263. 
inteftine, P.L. ii. 1001, vi.259, 

xi. 484; S. A. 1038. 
intimate, S.J. 223. 
intoxicate, P. R. iv. 328. 
intoxicated, P. L. ix. 1008. 
intrane'd, P. L. i. 301, xi. 420. 
intrench'd, P. P. i. 601. 
intricacies, P. L. viii. 182. 
intricate, P. P. ii. 877, v. 622, 

ix. 632. 
introduce, P. P. iii. 36S, v. 797 , 

xii. 241. 
introdue'd, P. L. x. 709. 
introduction, P. /{. iii. 247. 
intrude, Lye. 115. 
intrufion, P. P. xii. 178. 
intuitive, P. L. v. 488. 
invade, P. L. ii. 342, iii. 726, 

xi. 102; P. II. ii, 127. 
invaded, P. />. vi. 653. 

invaders, P. L. xi. 801. 
invading, Pf. exxxvi. 83. 



invalid, P.L. viii. 1 16. 
invafion, P. P. iii, 365. 
inveigh, Com. 538. 
invent, P. P. vi. 464 ; Com. 682. 
invented, P. L. ii. 70, iv. 524, 

ix. 767. 
inventer, P. L. vi. 499. 
inventers, P. P. xi. 610. 
invention, P. P. vi. 498. 
inventions, P. P. vi. 6*31, vii. 

121. 
invert, P. P. iii. 10. 
invefted, P. P. vii. 372. 
invefts, P.L. i. 208, xi. 233. 
invincible, P. P. i. 140, iv. 846, 

vi. 47; P.P. ii. 408; S.J. 

341, 1271. 
invincibly, P. L. vi. 806. 
inviolable, P. P. iv. 843, vi, 

398. 
inviron. See environ, 
invisible, P. P. i. 369, iii. 55, 

375, 586, 684, v. 157, 565, 

599 t vi. 681, vii. 122, 589, 

viii. 135, x. 444; Vac. Ex. 

66. 
invifibly, P. P. iv. 476. 
invitation, P.P. ii. 067. 
invite, P. P. ii. 278, v. 3/4, ix. 

402; S.J. 1684; L'Al.i)2; 

Com. 538. 
invited, P. /,. xii. 160. 
invites, P. 7,. iii. 188; P. P. 

i- 72. 
inviting, P. P. viii. 208, ix. 

777 \ P. P. ii.311, 
invocate, S. J. 1146. 
inundation, P. L. xi. 828. 
invoke, P. P. i. 13, xi. 590. 
invok'd, P.P. xi. 492, 591, xii. 

112; P. P. iv. 203; Cow. 

854. 
invoking, Ep. M. Win. 19. 

involve, P. L. ii. 384. 
involv'd, /\ P. i. 236, ii. 807, 

v. 879, vii. 277, 483, ix. ?5j 

/'. P. i. 41. 

inure, P. L. viii. 239- 



VERBAL INDEX. 



inur'd, P. L. ii. 21 6, xi, 362 ; 

P. R. i. 339, ». 102, 139; 

Com. 735. 
inutterable, P. L. ii. 626. 
invulnerable, P. L. ii. 812, vi. 

400. 
inward, P. L. iii. 52, 584, vi. 

861, viii. 221, 293, 539,542, 

608, ix. 97, 600, 762, 895, 

1125, x. 221, 871, xii. 101, 

495; P.P. i. 463, iv. 145; 

S. A. 162, 330, 1006, 1026, 

1689 ; Com. 466 ; Son. vii. 7. 
inwardly, P. L. iv. 88; Lye. 

127. 
inwards, P. L. xi. 439. 
inwove, P. L. iii. 352. 
inwoven, P. L. iv. 693. 
inwreath'd, P. L. iii. 36l. 
inwrought, L^c. 105. 
Job, PR. i. 369, iii. 64, 67, 

95. 
jocund, P. L. i. 787, vii. 372, 

ix. 793; S. A. 1669; X'^/. 

94 ; Com. 173. 
jog on, Ep. Hobf. II. 4. 
John, P. L. iii. 623 ; P. P. i. 

184, ii. 84. 
join, P. L. ii. 718, iii. 282, 

370, v. 164, 197, vi. 294, ix. 

882, x. 660, xi. 652, 686, 

xii. 516; S. A. 456; UPe/f. 

45 ; Od. Nat. 27. 
join'd, P. L. i. 90, 577-, iii- 

152, iv. 687, 863, v. 335, 

513, 834, vi. 62. 108, 206, 

494, vii. 4S8, viii. 58, ix. 

398,243,259, 909, x. 310, 

359, 925; P. R. iii. 258, 

426, iv. 298, '567 ; S. A. 

265, 1037, 1342. 
joining, P. L. v. 106, x. 302, 

924. 
joins, P. L. xii. 38, 388; S. A. 

1368. 
joint, P. L. i. 246, ii. 668, viii. 

625, x.405,40S; S. A. 110. 
joint- by-joint, S. A. 953. 



ointed, P. L. vii. 40£. 
oint-hands, P. L. ix. 244. 
oint-racking, P. L. xi. 488. 
oints, P. L. viii. 269, ix. 89I3 

S.A.6U, 1142. 
joking, Hor. III. 1. 
jollity, P.L. xi. 714; L'Al. 

26 ; Com. 104. 
jolly, Son. i. 4. 
Ionian, P. L. i. 508. 
Johnfon's, L'AL 132. 
Jordan, P. L. xii. 145 ; P. P. 

i. 24, 119, 329; ii. 2, 25,62, 

iii. 438, iv. 510; Pf. cxiv. 

14. 
Jordan's, P. L. iii. 535; Pf. 

cxiv. 9. 
Jofeph, P. P. i. 23, iii. 377: 

Pf. lxxxi. 18. 
Jofeph's, Pf. lxxx. 4. 
Jofliua, P. L. xii. 310. 
Jofiah, P. L. i. 418. 
Jove, P. L. i. 198, 512, 514, 

741, iv. 277, ix. 396, 508, x. 

584, xi. 185; P.P. ii. 215, 

iii. 84; Lye. 16, 82; II Pen f. 

30 ; Arc. 4>4> ; Com. 20, 41, 

78, 803, 1011. 
Jove-born, Com. 676. 
Jove's, P. L. iv. 719 ; P. P. iv. 

565; II Penf 48; Co?w. 1. 

Son. i. 7, xxiii. 3. 
journey, P. X. ii. 985, v. 559, 

viii. 36, ix. 479, xii. 1. 204 ; 

P.P. iii. 276; S.A. 149; 

Com. 303. 
journey, (verb) P.L. vii. 246, 

xii. 258 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 25. 
journey 'd, P. L. iv. 17 3. 
journe}r's, P. L. iii. 633; Ep. 

UobfA. 12. 
journeys, P. L. viii. 88. 
juft, P.L. ix.37. 
joufied, P. L. i. 583. 
joy, P. L. i. 123, 250, 524, 

788, ii. 371, 372, 387, 495, 

586, 765, iii. 67, 68, 137, 

265, 338, 34-7, 417, iv. 92, 



k 2 



TERBAL INEfliX. 



155, 3^9, 50$, v. 638,641, 
vi. 23, 94, 200, 607, 774, 
vii. if 1, 256', viii. 266, ix. 

115, 4*8, 633, 770, 843, 

882, 990, 1081, x. 103, 

345, 350, 351, 457, 577 , 

1052, xi. 43, 80, 139, 36l, 

625, 628, 869, xii. 22, 372, 

468,504, 551; P. R. i. 417, 

ii.37, 57, 119, iii- 437; S.A. 

1505, 1531, 1564, 1574; 

Com. 102, 677, 1011; 0J ; 

Ctr. 4 ; Od. Pafs. 5 ; Orf. o» 

TiW, 13 ; 0</. 60/. Muf. 1 ; 

P/.ii. 24, v. 34, bcxxiv. 26. 
joy, (verb) P. L. v. 46, viii. 1 70- 
joy'd, P. L. ix. 1166. 
joyfully, iy. lxxxv. 42. 
joylefs, P.L. iv. 766; P. P. 

iv. 578. 
joyous, P.L. viii. 515 ; Xj/c. 44. 
joys, P. 7^. ii. 819, iv. 411, ix. 

9So, x. 741 ; 0d. Nat. 66. 
Irafla, P. R. iv. 564. 
ire, P. £. i. 148, ii. 95, 155, iv. 

J 15, vi. 843, vii. 184, ix. 18, 

692, x. 936, 1023, xi. 885 ; 

P. R. iii. 219, 220; S. A. 

520; Pf. ii. 11, lxxx. 67, 

lxxxviii. 64. 
Iris, P. L. iv. 698, xi. 244 * 

Com. 9.92. 
Iris', CW 83. 
irkfome, P. £. ii. 527, v. 35, 

ix. 242. 
iron, P. /,.. ii. 327, 646, 878, 

iii. 594, iv. 859, 898, v. 887, 

vi. 576, 590, xi. 565; P. II. 

ii. 16S, iii. 326; S.A. 1124; 

Lvc. Ill ; 14 Pen/. 10? ; Cow. 

491 ; .So//, xvii. 8; Pf. ii. 20. 
irons, & A. 1243. 

liance, P. V,. viii. 617. 
irradiate, P. L. iii. 53. 
irrational, P. L. ix. 766, x. 

708 ; S. A. 673. 
irreconcileable, P. L. i. 122. 
irrecoverably, £'. A. 81. 



irregular, P. L. v. 624. 
irreligious, S. A. 860. 
irreparable, P. L. ii. 331 » 
irrefiftible, P. L. vi. 63 ; S. A. 

126. 
irreiolute, P. L. ix. 87; P. P„ 

iii. 243. 
irreverent, P. L. xii. 101. 
irrevocable, P. L. xii. 323. 
irriguous, P. L. iv. 255. 
irruption, S. A. 1567. 
Iiaac, P. L. xii. 268. 
lflimael, P/! Ixxxiii. 22. 
His, P.L. i.478; Od. Nat. 212. 
ifland, P. L. i. 205, xi. 834;. 

P. ft. iv. 92; CW. 50. 
ifle, P. L. i. 746, ii. 410, iv. 

275, x. 527; P. P. iv. 7h 

75 ; Cow. 27. 
ifles, P. L.i. 521, ii. 638, iii. 

567, 570, iv. 354, viii. 631, 

ix 1118 ; S. A. 715; Cow. 

21,517- 
Ifmenian, P. P. iv. 575. 
Il'rael, P. L. i. 413, 432, 482, 

xii. 267; P.P. i. 217, 254, 

ii. 36, 42,90, 311,442, iii. 

279, 378, 410, 413; 6'. A. 

39, 179, 240, 285, 454, 

1428, 1663, 1714; P/lxxx.. 

1. lxxxi. 14, 35, 47, 55 f 

cxiv. 5, 6, exxxvi. 42, 73. 
Ifraelites, F. JR. iii. 411; 5. ^f. 

1560. 
Ifraeft*, P.P. Hi; 441, iv. 480; 

S. /A 225, 233, 242, 1150,. 

1177, 1527; P/.lxxxii. 115. 
rffiie, P. 1. i. 508, iv. 280. 
ifiTue forth, P. P. iii. 305. 
rflued, P. h. iv. 454. 
iflued forth, P. L. viii. 233; 

P. JR. iv. 276. 
iflucs forth, P. /,. vi. 9. 
ifliliqg, P. h. vi. 332,'x.405. 
iiTuingfbrth, P. /,. x. 533, 537; 

P. P. iv. 62. 
Italian, Son. xviii. 1 1. 
iterate, P. L. ix. 1005, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



t't'h uriel, P. L. iv. 788, 810, 

868. 
jubilant, P. L. vii, 564. 
jubilee, P. L/iii. 348, vi. 884; 

Od. M. Mw/: 9- 
Judeea, P. ft. iii. 157; 5. A. 

252. 
Judah, P. I,, i. 457; ii. 440 ; 

P. ft. iii. 282 ; 5. A. 265, 

976. 
Judah's, P. ft. ii. 424; 0<J. 

Ndt.2%1. 
judge, P. L. x. 118,126, 160, 

209, xi. 167; Son. xiv. 13; 

Od. Nat. 164; Pf. vii. 43. 
judge, (verb) P. L. ii. 233, iii. 

123, 154, 330, iv. 904, 912, 

viii. 448, x. 55, 62, 71, 96, 

3S8, 992, xi. 603, 705, xii. 

460, 46'1 ; UAL 122 ; Son. x. 

13, xx. 13; Pf vii. 31, 

lxxxii. 24, 
judg'd, P. L. ii. 390, 448, iii. 

295, v. 850, vi. 37, 426, x. 

73, 81, 173, 209, 129, 494, 

1047, 1059, 1087, 1099, xii. 

412; P. ft.iv. 215; S.A. 882. 
judges, P. L. iv. 910, xii. 320; 

Hot. I. 3 ; Pf ii. 23, lxxxii. 4. 
judgeft, P. L. iii. 155. 
judgeth, Pf. vii. 29. 
judgement, P. L. viii. 636, ix. 

10, x. 57,81,164,197,932, 

xi. 668, xii. 14, 92 ; P. ft. 

iii. 37, iv. 324; S.A. 1027; 

Com. 75S ; Pf. i. 13, lxxxii. 6. 
judgements, P. L. xi. 69, 725, 

xii. 175. 
judicious, P. X. viii. 591, i.x. 

1020. 
juglers, S. A. 1325. 
juice, 6'. A. 550. 
juicieft, P.L. v. 327. 
julep, Com. 6'72. 
Julius, P. ft. iii. 39. 
juniper, P. ft. ii. 272. 
junkets, L'Al. 102 ; Hor. II. 3. 



Juno, P. X. iv. 500, ix. 18; 

Arc-. 23. 
ivory, P. L. iv. 778 ; P. R. iv. 

60. 

Jupiter, P. L. iv. 499. 

jurifdi&ion, P. L. ii. 319. 

juft, P. L. ii. 18, 38, 825, iii. 
98,215, 294, 335. iv.389,443, 
755, v.552,814,vi. 121,265, 
381, 7*6, 740, vii. 184, 180, 
231, 487, 570, 631, viii. 572, 
ix. 10,698, 700,701, 1056, x. 
7, 535, 643, 857, 888, 936, 
S69, 1045, xi. 65, 455, 526, 
577, 6*81, 703, SI 8, 876, 890, 
501, xii. 16, 92, 273, 294, 
540; P. R. i. 66, ii. 325, iii. 
62, 406, iv. 133 ; S. A. 237, 
293, 300, 703, 854; Com. 
13; Od. Cir. 15, 16 ; Od. D. 
F.I. 50; Od. SoLMnf. 14; 
Pf\. 14, 15, iv. 23, v. 38, 
vii. 37, 38, 41, 43, lxxxii. 
12. lxxxiv. 44. 

juft, (adverb) P. L. iii. 527, iv» 
460, 863. 

jufter, Eurip. 5. 

juft-in-time, P. R. iii. 298. 

juft then, P. L. ix. 278. 

juftice, P. L. i. 70, ii. 733, iii, 
132, 210,407, v. 247, x. 54, 
59, 78, 755, 858, xi. 66*7, 
807, xii. 99, 231, 401; 0</. 
Nat. 141 ; P/. vii. 62, lxxxv. 
47, lxxxviii. 51. 

justifiable, 6'. A. 294. 

justification, P. L. xii. 296. 

juftify, P. L. i. 26, x. 142. 

juftling, P.L. ii. 1018, x. 1074. 

juftly/P. L. iii. 112, 677, iv. 
72, v. 736, ix. 40, 100, x, 
168, 768, xi. 288, xii. 79 1 
P. ft. i. 442, 443, iv. 84; 
S.A. 375, 1171. 

ivy, P. L. ix. 2X7; Lye. 2 ; Com, 
55, 544. 

ivy-crowneJ, L'A? 9 16. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



K. 



keen, P. L. v. 436, vi. 322, ix. 

588, x. 166, xi. 842, P. P. 

i. 317; Cow. 422. 
keep, P. L. ii. 775, 852, 999, 

iii. 5/8, iv. 372, 420, 525, 

685, 842, viii. 320, 634, ix. 

62, 245, 704, 820, x. 856, 

xi. 550; P. R. ii. 434; S.J. 

49 ; Com. 584, 748 ; Od. Nat. 

21, 92; Pflc. Er. 56, 78; 

Ep.Hobf. II. 4; P/ iv. 39, 

vii. 7, lxxx. 1, lxxxiv. 37, 

lxxxviii. l. 
keeping, P. L. ix. 363, xii. 

365 ; Pf. vi. 20. 
keeps, P. L. vii. 379; P- P- i v - 

362 ; Cow. 167 ; T«c. Ex. 99', 

Hor. I. 2. 
ken, P. L. i. 59, xi. 379, 396; 

P. il.ii. 286. 

within ken, P. L. iii. 622. 
kennel, P. L. ii. 60S. 
kens, P. L. v. 265. 
kept, P. L. ii. 725, v. 128, 900, 

vii. 145, 594, 634, ix. 746, 

x. 427, 619; P.R. i. 360; 

Com. 913. 
kercheft, 11 Penf. 125. 
kernels, P. L. v. 346. 
key, P. L. ii. 725, 774, 850, 

871 ; 5. ii. 799; Cow. 13. 
key-hole, P. L. ii. 876. 
keys, P. L. iii. 485; Lye. 110. 
kick'd, P. L. iv. 1004. 
kid, P. L. iv. 34i, ix. 583, xii. 

20; S.J. 128; Com. 49S. 
kids, P. L. iii. 434. 
kill, P.i. x.402. 
kill'd, &m. x, 8 j Od. D.F.I. 7* 
killing, /w/c. i.k 
kills, P. I. xii. 168. 
kind, P. L. 1. 704, iii. 4fa, iv. 

217, 286, v. 479, ^ ( ;<', m.7.;, 

vji. 311, 394, \:>\, 153, viii. 

393, ix. 560, 721, 1101, \. 

248, xi. 337; P.M. iii. 22 r. 



5. ^. 1236; Cow. 187; Ep. 

Hobf. I. 14; P/. vi. 12, 

exxxvi. 2. 
kindle, Com. 794. 
kindled, P. L. ii. 170, ix. 637. 
kindles, P. L. x. 1076. 
kindlieft, P. L. v. 336. 
kindly, P. L. iv. 228, 668, vii. 

419 ; Od. Nat. 90. 
kindnefs, Pf. lxxxviii. 45. 
kindred, P. L. xii. 122. 
kinds, P. L. iv. 397, 671, v. 

341, vii. 393, viiL 343, 597,, 

x. 612, xi.582. 
kine, P. L. ix. 450, xi. 647. 
king, P. L. i. 131, 392, 444, 

471, 484, 735, ii. 43, 229, 

316,325,698,699,751,851, 

978, 992, iii. 317, 374, iv. 

41, 111, 821, 973, v. 220, 

640, 664, 690, 769, 777, 818, 

870, vi. 42, 227, 357, 70S, 

718, 886, vii. 122, 208, 608, 

viii. 239, ix. 442, x. 387, xi. 

218, xii. 165,205,326,359; 

P. R. i. 75, 99, 254, 372, 

421, ii. 76, 82, 463, 467, iii. 

36, 167, 226, 299, 441, iv. 

283, 36*4; II Pen/. 115; 

Son. xi. 4; Od. Nat. 209; 

Vac. Ex.75; Sen. 3; Pf. ii. 

J2, v. 4, lxxxi. 2, lxxxiv. 

16, exxxvi. 54. 

Eternal King, P. R. i. 236 ; 
Od. Nat. 2. 
King of kings, P. P. iv. 185. 
kingdom, P.L. ii. 325, 36*1, vi. 

183, 815, vii. l6l, x. 406 ; 

P.P. i. 241, 265, ii. 36, 481, 

iii. 152, 171, 199, 242,351, 

iv. 151, 369, 389; Od. Nat. 

171- 

kingdomj, P. L. ii. 384, 403, 
xii. 262; P. R. iv. 89, l6'3, 
182, 210, 363, 536; L>/c. 
177. 

kingdom's, l\ R. iv. 282. 

kindly, P. L. ii. 673, iii. 505, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



xL249; P.R.iu476;Son. 
xix. 12 ; Vac. Ex. 39. 

kings, P. L. i. 694, 721, ii. 4, 
iv. 212, 280, 383, xi. 243, 
390, 398, xii. 262, 320, 
329, 348; P. R. i. 117, ii. 
44, 449, iii. 12, 289, 297, 
366, iv. 73, 87; S. A. 281, 
-Sow. xv. 4; Orf. JVfitf. 59; 
Vac. Ex. 47; Ep. W. Sh. 16*; 
Pntf. 13; P/. ii. 22, lxxxii. 
2, lxxxvii. 11, cxxxvi. 62. 

Kiriathaim, S. A. 1081. 

Kifhon, Pf. lxxxiii. 37. 

kifs, ytfrc. 33; Orf. D. f.J.6; 
Odorc Tz'flie, 12; Pf. ii. 25. 

kifs'd, P. L. v. 134; P/ lxxxv. 
43. 

kifles, P. L. iv. 502. 

kift, Od.Nat. 65. 

knacks, Har. II. 3. 

knee, P. L. i. 112, v. 788, 817, 
vi. 194; Pf. lxxxi. 40. 

knee-tribute, P.L. v. 782. 

kneel'd, P.L. xi. 150. 

knees, P. L. iii. 321, v. 608, x. 
918. 

knew, P. L. i. 93, iv. 828, 
1013, v. 35, 287, vi. 327, 
viii. 54, 251, 271, 283, 445, 
508, ix. 56' I, 792, x. 12, 19, 
170, xi. 504; P. R. i. 271, 
275, 286, iv. 294, 394, 
504; S. A. 221, 222, 281, 
803, 1549; Com. 572, 645. 

knew'ft, P. L. xii. 577 ; S. A. 
878. 

knight, Son. viii. 1. 

knights, P. L. i. 581, ii. 536, 
ix. 30, 36; P.R. ii. 360, iii. 
342; UAL 119. 

knit, P. L. iv. 267; Com. 143. 

knitting, Com. 862. 

knock, S. A. 1772; Foe. Ex. 
24. 

knot, Com. 581 ; Vac. Ex. 90 ; 
P/. lxxxiii, 30. 

fcnot-grafs, Coin. 5 42. 



knots, P. X. iv. 242. 

know, P. Z. i. 630, 643, ii. 
206, 316, 740, 744, 821, 839, 
990, iii. 180, 662, 694, 703, 
iv. 86, 113, 517, 523, 565 9 
588, 637, 775, 827, 828, 830, 
831, 1006, v. 100, 243, 402, 
414, 454, 461, 741, 789, 
826, 856, 859, 860, 895, 
vi. 148, 163, 704, vii. 6l, 97, 
125, 127, 131, 631, 639, viii. 
103,173,191,192,280,282, 
328, 373, 406, 548, ix, 368, 
709, 726, 758, 773, 804, 
1071, 1073, 1137, x. 27, 
169, 207, 629, 967, xi. 50, 
85, 92, 356, 475, 578, xii. 
82, 174, 599,610; P.Jt.i. 
47, 89, 150, 203, 234, 292, 
356, 384, 464, 494, ii. 231, 
240, 305, 474, iii. 7, 52, 53, 
193, 249, 347, iv. 146, 160, 
227, 286, 287 ,' 294, 538; 
S. A. 62, 395, 742, 1075, 
1091, 1418, 1534, 1547, 
1554, 1556; Lye. 119; drc. 
44; Com. 316, 490, 580, 
788 ; Son. xvii. 9 ; Od. Paf. 
33 ; Pf. lxxxv. 8. 

knowing, P.L. iv. 222, vii, S3, 
viii. 438, ix. 709, 1055, xi. 
307, xii. 127; P. P. i. 356, 
ii. 474, iv. 288, 492. 

knowledge, P. L. i. 628, iii. 47, 
iv. 222, 515, 525, 638, v. 52, 
60, 108, 509, vii. 75, 120, 
126, 543, viii. 324, 353, 
551, ix. 687, 697, 723, 727, 
752, 790, 804, 820, 998, 
1073, xi. 87, xii. 279, 559, 
582; P. R. i. 213, 293, ii. 
371, iv. 224, 225. See Tree. 

known, P. L. i. 80, 374, 376, 
515, 732, ii. 839, iii- 647, iv, 
757, 836, vi. 20, 418, 432, 
vii. 85, viii. 106, ix. 110, 
699,976,1023, 1102, 1150, 
x. 5, 156, 684, xi. 88, 307, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

xii. 544; P. JR. i. 262, 437, ladies, P. P. ii. 357; S. A, 

446', ii. 7, 414, Hi. 433; 16*53; UAL 121; Foe. JEjt. 

6'. A. 041, 1082, 1218 ; Com. 60. 

724 ; So*, x. 9, xii. 2 ; Ep. Ladon's, Arc. 97. 

Hobf. I. 5. lady, ^rc. 105; Com. 319, 507, 

knows, P. L. ii. 151, S06, 807, 564, 574, 6l8, 659, 666 7 737, 

iv. I03,201,vii.l44,ix.l38, 818, 910, 938,966; Son. ix. 

705, 765, 1 146, x.7S7,79'3 t 1 ; £p. M. Win. 47. 

xi. 199 ; P. P- i. 176; S. A. lag, P. P. x. 266. 

516, 1350; Com. 87 ; Son. lagging, S. A. 337, 1577- 

viii. 5 ; P/. i. 8, iv. 16. Lahor, P. L. xi. $91. 

know'it, P. P. i. 19, ii. 730, laid, P. L. i. 137, 172, iv. 457, 

iii. 276, iv. 426, 584, 895, 521, 741, 791, 815, vi. 33& 

926, 1006, vi. 6*89, vii. 493, 572, viii. 254, ix. 408, «. 

536, 622, viii. 372, 573, 620, 1046, xi. 438, 479, 732; 

ix. 252, x. 72, 948, xi. 335 ; P. It. ii. 26l, iii. 283, iv. 

P. P. iii. 7, 201 ; S. A. 1081 ; 343 ; II Pen/. 150 ; Od. Nat. 

Vac. Ex. 55. 12, 83S ; Ep. M. Win. 32 ; 

Kfar, P. L. xi. 394. £jt». Hobf. I. 2 ; Pf lxxx. 49, 

70. 

L. laid up, P.P. ii. 104. 
lair, P. P. vii. 457. 

laborious, P. L. ii. 80, xi. 178; lake, P. X. i. 210, 229, 280., 

S. A. 14,; Lye. 72. 702, ii. 74, 169, 576, iii. 

labour, P. L. i. l64, ii. 262, 521, iv. 26 1, 459, v - 186, x. 

1021, 1022, iv. 328, 6l3, 562, xi. 847; ?• R - »■ 23 » 

6.25, vi. 492, viii. 133, 213, iii. 271; %c 109; Com. 

ix. 208, 236, 944, x. 491, 433,865. 

670, 1054, 1056, xi. 172, lakes, P. L. ii. 621, vii. 397 7 

375 ; P. P. ii. 132 ; S. A. 37, 437. 

1365 ; CW.192 ; Ep. W. Sli.2. lamb, P. P. ix. 583, xii. 20. 

labour, (verb) P. L. ix. 205, lambs, P. X. iii. 434, xi. 649 ; 

302 ; Sen. ix. 4. P/. cxiv. 12. 

laboured, Com. 29 1. lament, P.P. viii. 244, xi. 266; 

]abours,P.L.ix.214,841 ;P.P. Od. Nat. 183. 

iv. 386; aS. A. 709, 1259; lament, (verb) P. L. i. 448, xi. 

Cow. 1006; Od. Pajf. 14. 287, 874; lye. 60 ; CM. P>. 

labourer's, P. L. xii. 631. F. /. 72. 

labouring, P.P. ii. 665, x. 101 2, lamentable, P. P. ii. 617. 

Ki. $65, xii. 18; P. Ii. iii. lamentation, P. P. ii. 579; 

330 ; S.J. 1298 ; L'Al. 74. 5. y/. 1708, 1713. 

labyrinth, P. L. ii. 584, ix. lamented, P. P. x. 845. 

183; Com. 2/8. lamenting, J*. L. v. 894, xi. 

lack, S. A. 905, P/?. Mo//. II. 675. 

24. lamp, P. L. iii. 22, 581, iv. 

lackey, (verb) Co???. 45.5. 704, vii. 3?0, viii. 520; 

lad, P. P. ii. 4:>9; CW. 619. J* Pen/. 85; Son. ix. 10; 

laden, P. L. x. 550 ; Cow. 394. Od. Nat. 242. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lajnps, P. L. i. 728, v. 713, 
ix. 104, xii. 255 j Cam. 198. 

lance, P. L. i. 766. 

Lancelot, P.P. ii. 36l. 

land, P. L. i. 227, 228, 343, 
519, 739, ii. 589, 940, iii. 75, 
440, 531,548, 653, i v. 643, 
652, 662, vii. 284, 307, 415, 
473, viii. 144, ix. 76, 81, 
117, x. 693, xi. 337, xii. 
122, 127, 134, 138, 156, 159, 
172, 178, 197, 259, 339; 
P.ii.iii. 94, 379, 420, 437; 
S. A. 99, 257, 710 ; Son. xv. 
14, xix. 13; Od. Nat. 52, 
221; Od. D.F.I. 26; Brut. 
4, 8; Pf ii. 4, lxxx. 40, 
lxxxi. 19, 37, 42, lxxxv. 1, 
40, 51, lxxxvii. 7, lxxxviii. 
51, -cxiv. 3, cxxxvi. 37, 74. 

land-mark, P. L. xi. 432. 

land-pilot's, Com. 309. 

landed, P. L. x. 3l6. 

lands, P. L. i. 290, iii. 588, v. 
263, vii. 429, xii. 46; Soil 
viii. 7« 

landikip, P. L. ii. 491, iv. 153, 
v. 142 ; L'AL 70. 

lane, Com. 311. 

language, P. X. viii. 373, ix. 
553, xii. 54; P. P. iv. 333 ; 
Vac. Ex. 1. 

ianguifh, P. P. x. 995. 

languifh'd, P. P. vi. 497 ; S. A. 
1 19 ; Cw«. 744 ; Ep. M. Win. 
33. 

languifhing, P. X. x. 996. 

lank, Co?ra. 836. 

lantern, L'AL 104; CW. 197- 

lap, P. P. iv. 254, ix. 1041, x. 
77§, xi. 536; S. A. 536 ; 
Z?/c. 138; L'AL 136; Cowz. 
257; Od. May-M. 3; Fac. 
£#. 84. 

Lapland, P. P. ii. 665. 

lapfe, P. L. viii. 263, xii. 83. 

lapfcd, P. L. iii. 176, x. 572. 

larboard, P. P. ii. 1019. 



large, P. L. i. 135, 213, 285, 
444, 790, iii. 430, 495, 530, 
iv. 144, 223, 300, 434, v. 
317, 318, 343, 558, vi. 309, 
vii. 436, viii. 191, 375, x. 
244, xi. 626, 732, xii. 21, 
305; P. R. i. 365, iii. 10, 
73, 262 ; Lye. 184; Fore, (f 
Con. 20 ; Pf iv. 5, lxxxi. 43. 

large-liml/d, Pf. cxxxvi, 69. 
too large, P. P. iv. 700, viii. 
104. 

largely, P. X. viii. 7, ix. 1043, 
xi. 845 ; Pf. lxxx. 23. 

larger, P. L. x. 529. 

lark, P. P. ii. 279 ; L'AL 41 ; 
Cow. 317. 

Lars, Od.Nat. 191. 

lafcivious, P. L. ix. 1014; 
P.P.iv.9l;S.-4. 536. 

laft, P.L. i. 376, 490, 571, 
ii 324, 416, iii. 134, 259, 
278, v. 19, 115, 165, 166, 
481, 568, vi. 797, vii. 323, 
449, viii. 302, ix. 170, 377, 
379, 896, 1079, x. 197, 609, 
831, xi. 275, 545, 579, 736, 
787, 872, xii. 189, 330, 545, 
552, 574; P.P. i. 35, 283, 
iv. 300, 509, 622; S. A. 
1023, 1389, 1426, 1594; 
Lye. 71, 108; Od.Nat. 106, 
163; Od. D.F.I. 77; Vac. 
Ex. 14, 47 ; Ep. Hobf II. 
25; Pf lxxxvii. IS. 

laft, (verb) P. L. vi. 693, x. 
812; Pf cxiv. 16. 

lafted, Ep. Hob/Ah 25. 

laft of all, Od. on Time, 10. 
at laft, P. L. L 620, ii. 426, 
643, 781, 927, 1034, iii. 
499, 545, iv. 79, 807, 497, 
vi. 78, 874, x. 171, 190, 
449, 635, 890, 981, 985, xi. 
664, 759, 778, xii. 106,356; 
P.P. i. 309; S.A.24>, 275, 
944, 1566, 1639; Lye. 192; 
IlPe»fl67; Ccwi.6'1; 555, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



594, 735; Od. Nat. 109, 
165 ; Pf. vii. 42, lxxx. 40. 
lading, P. L. i. 55, iii. 449, x. 

742; Brut. 11; Pf v. 40. 
Jaftly, P. L. iii. 240, x. 402, xi. 
280; P. it. iv. 388; S.A. 
1590 ; i/yc. 83. 
late, P. L. iii. 151, v. 113, 240, 
ix. 26, 53, x. 436, 86l, 1073, 
xi. 70, 653, 751, 752, 886, 
xii. 195; P. R. i. 65, 133, 
327; 5. A. 179, 746; Cow. 
179, 540 ; Son. vii. 4 ; Vac. 
Ex. 20. 
of late, P. L. ii. 77, 991, ix. 

1115; P. ii. iii. 364 ; Od. 

D.F.I. 4,7. 
fo late, P. L. i. 113, v. 675, 

vii. 92, ix. 982, x. 721, 

941, xii. 642; P. R. ii. 3. 
too late, P.L. vi. 147, ix. 44, 

884, x. 755, 904; P. R. 

iii. 42; S.A. 228; &». i. 

11. 

lately, P. X. ii. 979, 1004, x. 38, 

xii. 542; P. it. ii. o, 10 ; 

Ep. Hobf.l. 11. 

later, P. L. i. 509, x. 6l3 ; P. it. 

iii. 284; II Pen/. 101; Sow. 

x.9- 
lateral, P. L. x. 705. 
lateft, P.L.iv. 567, v. 18; Od. 

Pajf. 22; Ep. ifo*/ I. 13; 

P/. viii. 4. 
Latona, ^/c 20. 
Latona's, Son. xii. 6. 
latter, P. L. ii. 235, iv. 1004, 

v. 489, ix- 558, xii. 105 ; 

Vac. E*. 8. 
(avers, S.A. 1727; Cow. 838. 
laves, htic 175. 
laugh, P. L. ii. 204, x. 6*26, xi. 

626; P/. 11. 9, lxxx. 27. 
laughing, //<;/. ll. 1. 
Laughs, P.L. 11. 731. 
laugh'ft, P.L. v. 737. 
laughter,?. L. vi.603, ^ iii. 78, 
188, xii. 59; //.-/'. 



laving, P. P. i. 280. 

Lavinia, P. L. ix. 17. 

lavifh, Arc. 9 ; Cow. 465. 

lavifh'd, S. A. 1026. 

laureat, Lye. 151 ; Son. xvi. 9. 

laurel, P." L. iv. 694; S. A. 
1735. 

laurels, Lye. 1. 

law, P. L.ii. 200, iv. 637, 750, 
v. 798, 822, vi. 41, 42, ix. 
654, 775, x. 83, 805, xi.49, 
xii. 29, 287, 289, 290, 297, 
300, 306, 309, 397, 402, 404, 
416,488; P.P. i. 207,212, 
260, ii. 328, iii. l6l, iv.225, 
334, 364; S. A. 811, 890, 
1053, 1225, 1320,1386,1409, 
1425 ; Arc. 70 ; Son. xxiii. 
6; Od.Cir. 15, 16 ; Pf. i. 5, 
6, lxxxi. 15. 
without law, P. L. v. 798. 

lawful, P. L. v. 570, viii. 614 ; 
P. ii. ii. 230; S. A. 231, 
1366. 

lawlefs, P. L. xii. 173 ; P. P. 
ii. 472. 

lawn, II Penf. 35 ; Orf. Nat. 85. 

lawns, P. L. iv. 252 ; L'Al. 71 ; 
Com. 568, 965. 

Lawrence, Son. xx. 1. 

laws, P. JL ii. 18, 241, v. 679, 
680, 693, 819, 844, 883, x. 
228, xii. 226, 230, 244, 282, 
283,304,521,522; S.A. 309, 
314; Lye. 25; Com. 766; 
Son. xxi. 3; Hor. I. 2; P/. 
lxxxii. 12. 

lax, P. L. vii. 162. 

lay, P.L. i. 52, 1 96, 209, 301, 
312, ii. 168, iii. 628, iv. 28, 
\ i. 239, 390, viii. 463, ix. 41 8, 
x- 89, 777, 851, xi. 380,506, 
xii. 608 ; P. Ii. ii. 204, iii. 
255, 332 ; S. A. 395, 1097, 
1239, 1702 ; lye. 189; Com. 
13; S©». i. 8 ; Orf. iVr//. 25 ; 
/■/: 11. 4, ni. 13, iv. 36, 
lx.xxiv. 1 1. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lay by, P. L. iii. 339- 

lay down, P. R. i. 157, ii. 482. 

lay hold, S.A. 1716. 

lay on, P. R. ii. 54. 

lay out, S. A. I486. 

lay fiege, P. X. xi. 656. 

lay up, 5. A. 1485. 

lay in wait, P. X. ix. 1173. 

lays, F.L. vii. 436; P. P. iv. 

363 ; Lye. 44 ; Cow. 849. 
lays forth, P. X. iv. 259- 
lay'ft, P. P. i. 247, ii. 189; 

S. A. 849. 
lazar-houfe, P. X. xi. 479* 
lazy, Od. on Time, 2. 
iead, P. X. iii. 255, iv. 100, 

530, 

v. 37 5 y 684, viii. 86, ix. 631, 

696, x. 261,463, 830, xi.364, 

468, xii. 17, 309 ; P. R. ii. 

474, iii. 239,366; L'AL 35, 

89; Arc. 40; Com. 114; 

6'ow. xxii. 13 ; Pf. v. 21, 22. 
lead forth, P. X. vi. 46, 47- 
lead on, P. X. xii. 614 ; Com, 

330, 657. 
leaden, X" Pew/ 43. 
leaden-ftepping, Od. on Time, 2. 
leader, P. X. i. 272, ii. 19, iv. 

933, 949, vi. 232, 451, 621 ; 

P. R. i. 99. 
leaders, P. X. i. 357, vi. 67. 
leadeft, P. X. xi. 372; Pf. 

Ixxx. 3. 
leading, P. X. ii. 991, ix. 631, 

x. 26*7; P. P. i. I89. 
leads, P. X. ii. 433, 525, 976, 

iii. 696, viii. 6l3, ix. 215, 

x. 266; P. R. iii. 53; ^rc. 

76 ; Com. 518 ; $o/j. xxi. 10 ; 

Od. Maij-M. 2. 
leaf, P. X. iv. 695, v. 747, vii. 

317; Com. 622,630; P/.i.9. 
leafy, Com. 278. 
league, P. X. i. 87, ii. 319, 929, 

iv. 164, 339, 375, x. 274, 

438; P. ft. iii. 269, 370, iv. 

b*9\ .5. ,4. H89; Soji xv.8. 



league-breaker, 5. A. 1184, 

1209. 
leagu'd, P. X. x. 868 ; P. #. i. 

359. 
leagues, P. X. iii. 488 ; P. P. 

iii. 392. 
lean, S.A. 1632; Xyc. 123; 

Com. 585, 709. 
lean'd, P. X. iv. 494. 
leaning, P. X. v. 12. 
leans, Cow. 355 ; Son. xvii. 13,. 
leap'd, P. X. iii. 470, 472. 
leaps, P. X. iv. 187. 
learn, P. X. i. 695, ii. 354, 686, 

iv. 400, v. 894, vi. 147, 717, 

viii. 68, 190, ix. 275, xi.360, 

xii. 56l ; P.P. i. 91, 203, 

292, iv. 254, 515,625; S.A. 

187 ; Son. xxi. 9; Od. D.F.I. 

73 ; Hor. II. 3. 
learned, L'AL 132 ; Vac. Ex.90. 
learn'd, P. X. ii. 8l6, iv. 533, 

v. 856, vi. 367, xii. 440, 575 ; 

$. A. 936 ; Xj/c. 120 ; Son. 

xvii. 11, xviii. 13. 
learning, P. P. iv. 231 ; Son. xi. 

13; Fore, of Con. 9. 
learnt, P. R. i. 146, iv. 36l ; 

Com. 530, 822. 
leas, Com. 9^5. 
leafe, Pp. M. Win. 52. 
leaft, P. X. i. 679, ii. 338, 339, 

iii. 120, 277, iv.855, vi. 221, 

284, viii. 35, ix. 380, 460, x. 

875,951; P.P. iii. 109, iv. 

11; S.A. 195, 9^7, 1058, 

1136. 
leaft of all, P. X. v. 811, viii. 

397. 

at leaft, P. X. i. 258, ii. 22, 
iv. 110, 994, vii. 139, viii. 
537, ix. 146, 296, 555, xi. 
39, 95 ; P. R. i. 60, 224, 
380, 459, 485, ii. 136, 371, 
iii. 1 03, iv. 494; $.,4. 208, 
218, 322,499,951. 

not leaft, P. X. iv. 510. 
leathern, Com. 6^L 



VERBAL INDEX. 

leave, P. L. i. 224, 236, iii. 238, 443,689, 851, vii. 125, yiii, 

247, iv. 529, 789, v. 118, 2, 77, 46'0, 478, 534, ix. 142, 

669, viii. 168, ix. 265, x. 338, 345, 351, 652, 1051, 

819, 820, 1070, xi. 269, 804, 1057, 1185, x. 46, 421, 437, 

xii. 110, 186, 339,439, 455, 452, 534, xi. 221, 304, 753 y 

5S6; P. P. iii. 78 ; S. A. 11, xii. 6l, 71, 343, 481, 506, 

506, 885, 996; Od. Nat. 513,523; P. R. i. 16, 106, 

140; P/Mxxxi.49. 248, ii. 62, 116, 280, iii. 206, 

leave, (fubft.) P.L. ii. 250, iv. Q56 y iv. 207, 396, 644; 

434, viii. 377, xii. 348; P. R. S. A. 1027, 1097, 1480, 

j. 409, ii- 302; S. A. 15; 1685, 1712, 1715; Lye. 9 ; 

Com. 26 ; Son. xiii. 12. Arc. 41; Co???. 188, 280, 

-without leave, P. X. ii. 685, 283; Son. x. 4; Od. Nat. 

viii. 237, ix. 725, x. 760. 206. See hand, fide. 

leaves, P. L. iv. 747, ix. 621, left out, Com. 137. 

1074, x. 434, xii. 129, 153, legal, P. L. xii. 410; S. A, 

163 ; P.P. iv. 306 ; L'Al. 87. 313. 

leaves, (fubft.) P. X. i. 302, iv. legend, S. A. 1737- 

266, v. 6, 219, 480, ix. 519, legion, P. L. vi. 230, 232, viii. 

615, 1095, 1110; Lye. 5,44; 232. 

J I Pen/. 129; Arc. 57; Od. legions, P. £. i. 301* 632, ii. 

Paf. 34; £/>. JF. Sh. 11. 132, 537, 1006, iv. 942, v. 

leaving, P. L. x. 711 ; P. P. i. 669, vi. 64, 142, 206, 6*55, 

364; Od. Nat. 178, 836. vii. 134, viii. 427 ; P. it. iv. 

leav'ft, 6*. ^. 692. 66, 629 ; Com. 603. 

Lebanon, P. L. i. 447- legs, P. L. x. 512. 

led, P. L. i. 129, 401, 455, leifure, P. L. ii. 1046, x. 510, 

678, iii. 698, iv. 268, 476, xi. 254; P. R. ii. 210; 

605, 797, v. 215, 356, vi. S. A. 917; II Pen/. 49; Ep. 

26, 232, vii. 575, viii. 269, Hop/. II. 23. 

302, 485, 511, ix. 473, 644, Lemnos, P. L. i. 746. 

1039, x. 188, 324, xii. 639; Lemures, Od. Nat. 191. 

P. R. i. 15, 290, 299, ii. lend, P. L. ix. 260, xii. 200; 

222, iii. 283, 295, iv. 228 ; P. P. i. 393, iv. 272 ; S. A. 

S. A. 365, 6*38, 741, 823, 1 ; Com. 706, 737 ; Sew. xiii. 

1623, 1629, 1635; Jl Pen/. 9- 

6'9 ; iy lxxxi. 28, cxiv. 4. lends, Co???. 938. 

led on, P. L. vii. 6l ; P. P. i. length, P. L. i. 209, 564, ii. 

192, 252. 274, 709, $9*, 102S, vi. 7S t 

ledft, P. R. i. 8. 107, vii. 483, ix. 79, x. 302, 

lee, P. L. i. 207. xi. 730, 782 ; P. R. iii. 275, 

Lee, Vac, Ex. 97- iv. 29; S. A. 348, 570; L'^/. 

leer, P. L.iv.503. 111. 

Ices, Com. S09. at length, P./,. i. 648, ii. 

left, P. L. i. 146, 213, 433, ii. 217, .951, iv. 357, 607, 

361, 633, 1000, iii. 207, iv. v. 755, vi. 249, 635 t 795, 

80, 81, 428, 595, v. 235, vii. 158, ix. 527, 551, 598, 

236, 526, 730, vi. 104,309, 792, 89*, 1066, xi. 719, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



xii. 191, 258, 504; P. R. 
i. 152, iii. 5, 433, iv. 503, 
568 ; S. A. 250, 535, 865, 
962, 1629 ; Vac. Ex. 43 ; 
Pf. ii. 22, vii. 34, 54, 
lxxxiii. 1, lxxxiv. 27, 
lxxxvi. 57. 
lengthen'd out, P. X. x. 774. 
lenient, S. A. 659. 
lent, P. L. iv. 483 ; Com. 680; 
Od. D. F. I. 75 ; P/.lxxxiii.3 1 . 
Leo, P. X. x. 676\ 
leper, P. L. i. 471. 
leprous, Od. Nat. 138. 
Lefbian, Lye. 63. 
lefs, P. L.i. 257, 593, 779, ii. 
47, 108, 349, 443, 553, 920, 
924, 1040, 1041, iii. 411, 
429, iv. 46, 478, 479, 594, 
6*17, 854,919, 920, 925, v. 
262, 790, 829, 874, vi. 59, 
i92, 206, 366', 378, 430, 844, 
vii. 348, viii. 88, 224, 539, 
543, 544, 566, ix. 14, 126, 
320, x. 15, 99S, 1098, xi. 9, 
11, 285, 398; P. it. i. 147, 
383, 404, iii. 68, 126, 257, 
iv. 169, 171, 459; S. A. 
305, 620, 772, 792, 1064, 
1071, 1245; Arc. 12; Com. 
327; Son. vii. 9; P/Ivii. 11, 
viii. 15. See Far. 
much lefs, P. it iii. 236, iv. 

113; Son. vii. 7. 
no lefs, P.L. u 144, 647, ii. 
295, 414, 509, 848, iii. 119, 
626, vi. 468, vii. 85, 126,. 
viii. 248, ix. 1065, x. 531, 
xi. 774, 784; P. R. ii. 
127, iv. 105; S.A. 1142; 
Com. 288; Son. xvi. 11. 
not lefs, S. A. 988. 
leffen, P. L. iii. 304, vii. 6l4 ; 

S. A. 767. 
lefiens, S. A. 1563. 
letter, P. L. v. 101, vii. 382; 

Arc. 79- 
left, P. L. ii. 468, 483, 701 > 



836, iv. 665, 984, v. 244 r 
396, 731, 890, vi. 163, vii. 
17, 44, 150, 272, 546, viii. 
235, ix. 251, 354, 663, 883, 
947, x. 133, 252, 783, 784, 
872,1024, 1056, xi. 93, 101, 
108, 123, 883, xii. 45, 217; 
P. R. ii. 140, 145, iv. 558, 
631 ; S. A. 794, 952, 1237, 
1254, 1451, 1521, 1567; 
Com. 156, 406, 940; Son. 
xix. 6 ; Pf. ii. 25, vii. 4. 

let, P. L. i. 264, ix. 173, 798, 
xi. 585, 893, xii. 192; P. R. 
i. 143, 230, ii. 53, 233, iii. 
151, 171, 431, iv. 130, 209, 
223; S. A. 43, 84,116,178, 
488,507,573,725,909,951, 
999, 1632,1715,1725; Lye, 
153; L'Al. 125; UPenf. 85, 
147, 155, 161 ; Com. 402, 
599, 602, 814, 939, 956; 
Od. Nat. 128 ; Pf. ii. 6, v. 
29, vii. 13, 14, lxxx. 70, 
lxxxiii. 42, 44, 50, 51, 
6l, lxxxv. 34, lxxxvi. 62 , 
lxxxviii. 5, 10, exxxvi 1, 5, 
9,89- 

let be, S.A. 1116. 

let down, P. L. iii. 523; Od, D* 
F.I. 56. 

let fall, P. L. x. 174. 

let forth, P. L. vii. 207. 

let in, P. L. vii. 566, x. 620 ; 
5.^.561. 

let loofe, P. L. vi. 696. 

letpafs, P. L. ix. 479- 

let flip, Com. 743. 

let there be, P. L. vii. 243, 
26l, 339. 

Lethe, P. i. ii. 583. 

Lethean, P. L. ii. 604. 

lets, P. L. ix. 1184, xii. 344? 
Com. 378. 

lets in, Com. 466. 

lets pafs, P. X. xii. 196. 

letters, Od. PaJ\ 35 ; £p. //<>£/: 
II. 33. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

Levant, P. L. x. 704. Son. xviii. 2 yOd. D. F; I. SI; 

Leucothea, P. L. xi. 135; Com. Vac. Ex. 36, 62 ; Ep. IV. Sk. 

875. 15; P/.iv.40. lxxxviii.4, 20. 

level, P. L. i. 726. ii. 634, iv. lies, P. X. ii. 588, 958, 974, 

252; Lye. 98. iv. 569, viii, 193, 641, ix. 

leveil'd, P. L. ii. 712, iv. 543, 349, 725, x. 987, xi. 177, 

vi. 591, vii. 376. 653 ; S. A. 118, 339, 1725 ; 

Leviathan, P. L. i. 201, vii. Lye. 80, 151; L'AL 79, 

412. 110; Com. 37; Od. Nat. 31, 

levied, P. L. ii. 905, xi. 219- 151 ; Od. Paff. 21 ; Ep. Hobf 

levity, S. A. 880. I. 1 ; Brut. 8, 9 ; P/ vii. 40. 

levy, P. L. ii. 501. lies, (fubft.) P. L. i. 367, iii- 

lewd, P. L. i. 490, iv. 193; 93, v. 243, 709, ix. 620, x. 

Cwra. 465. 42 ; P. P. i. 375, 407, 408, 

lewdly, P. L. vi. 182. 433, iv. 124; Com. 692 ; Pf 

lewdly-pamper'd, Com. 770. iv. 12. 

liable, P. X. vi. 397; S. A. 55. lieth, Ep. Hobf. II, 1. 

liar, P. L. iv. 949; P. R. i. life, P. X. i. 363, ii. 624, iii. 

428. 244, 294, 297, 357, 450, iv. 

libbard, P. L. vii. 467. 196, 220, 317, 425, 485, 666 9 

Libecchio, P. L. x. 706. v. 81, 427, 474, 485, vi. 

liberal, P. L. iv. 415, viii. 362, 460, 46l, vii. 239, 526, viii. 

ix. 997. 184, 193, 250, ix. 73, 112, 

liberty, P. L. ii. 256, iv. 958, 241, 686, 689, 697, 833,934, 

v. 793, 823, vi. 164, 420, x. 954, 984, x. 128, 178, 202, 

307, 368, xii. 82, 83, 100, 784, 790, 90S, 941, 985, 

526; P. R. i. 365, iii. 427 ; 1013, 1019, 1083, xi. 42,62, 

S. A. 270, 271, 803, 949, 64, 79, 169, 198, 331,365, 

1454; L'AL 36; Son.x.7, 369,416, 446, 502,506, 546, 

xii. 2, 11; Eurip. 1; Pf. 548, 553, 6l0, 650, 823, xii. 

cxiv. 2. 220,406,407,414,425,429, 

liberty's, Son. xxii. 10. 435, 438, 443, 571 ; P> R. i. 

lickerifh, Com. 700. 396, ii. 77, 80, 372, iii. 22, 

Libra, P. L. iii. 558. 232, iv. 265, 298, 305, 370, 

Libyan, P. L. i. 355, iv. 277, 589, 590; S. A. 66, 90, 91, 

xii. 635. 100, 107, 108, 512, 521, 

Libyck, Od. Nat. 203. 534,592,656,688, 88S, 915, 

lice, P. L. xii. 177. 952, 1002, 1005), 1059, 1388, 

licence, Son. xii. 11. 1579, 1668, 1711; Lye. 76; 

Litlias, P. L. ii. 545. Com. 220, 609, 678 ; Son. 

lick up, \\ L. x. 630. xiv. 4, xxi. 9; Ep. M. Win. 

lick'd, P. L. ix. 526. 14; Ep. Hobf 11. II, 24; 

liclors, P. R. iv. 65. Pore, of Con. 9 ; Pf. iii. 5, 6, 

lie, (Cuba.) Pf. vii. 54. vii. 15, lxxxv. 28, lxxxvi. 51, 

lie, P. L. i. 26*6, 279, ii- 360, Ixxxviii. 11, 17, 54. See 

iii. 243, iv. 631, ix. 76, x. Tree. 

276 y xii. 190; P. H. i. 263, life's, P. fl. ii. 372; Ep. M. 

473 ; 6*. A. 480, 579; fyc. W%. 52. 

53; Arc. 6'8; CW 110, 977; life for life, P.L. iii. 236. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



life-blood, P. L. viii. 467. 

life-giving, P. L. iv. 199' 

lifelefs, P. L. iii. 443, ix. 1154, 
x. 707. 

lift, P. L. iii. 486, iv. 688, vi. 
299 1 P.P. iv. 558; Son. viii. 
9 ; Dante II. 2 ; P/ lxxxvi. 
12. 

lifted. Cow. 601. 

lift up, P. L. ii. 393 ; Pf. iv. 29, 
30. 

lifted high, P. L. vi. 189- 

lifted up, P. L. iv. 49. 

lifting, P.P. ii. 338, iv. 48. 

Ligea's, Com. 880. 

light, P. L. i. 63, 73, 85, 181, 
245, 391, 729, ii. 137, 220, 
269,398,433,867,959,974, 
1035, 1042, iii. 1, 3,4, 51, 
88, 196, 375, 500, 579, 
594, 713, 723, 724, 730, iv. 
608, 624, 664, v. 4, 42, 
160, 179, 208, 250, 423, 600, 
643, 714, vi. 4, 6, 9, 481, 
660, vii. 98, 243, 249, 250, 
251, 254, 339, 345, 352, 
359, 362, 363, 365, 377, 378, 
viii. 22, 37, 140, 150, 156, 
158, 245, 273, 285, ix. 
105, 192, 639, xi. 80, 134, 
808, xii. 421, 423, 473; 
P.P. i. 116, iv. 228, 239, 
289, 400, 460 ; S. A. 70, 
75, 84, 90, 92, 98, 99, 
160, 162, 584, 591, 592; 
UAL 6l ; II Penf. 80, l6'0 ; 
Arc. 19; Com. 144, 199, 
340, 369, 374, 381, 735 ; 
Son. ix. 10, xix. 1, 7, xx. 9, 
xxii. 3 ; Od. Nat. 8, 20, 62, 
73, 110; Od. PaJ. 6; Od. 
Sol. Muf. 28 ; Ep. M. Win. 
70;Ep.Hobf.I.i6, 11.22; 
Pf. iv. 29, lxxx. 7, cxxxvi. 
26. 

light of light, P. R. iv. 597. 
too light, P. L. v. 495. 

light, (adj.) P. L. iii. 439, iv. 



1012, vi.642, ix. 3S6;P.P. 
iv. 239; L'AL 6l ; Com. 144; 
Son. xx. 9; Ep. Hobf. II. 22. 

light, (verb) P. L. viii. 520, ix. 
173, 305, x. 73, 740, 934, 
xi. 590, 767 f 858 ; P. R. iv. 
460. 

light-arm'd, P. L. ii. 902, vi. 
529. 

light-armed, P. R. iii. 311. 

light down, P. L. i. 349. 

lighted, P. L. iv. 570, vi. 103, 
x. 316, xi. 209. 

lighten, P. L. x. 96O ; S. A. 744. 

lightening, P. X. i. 175, ii. 66 t 
v. 734, vi. 642, 849, x. 184, 
1075, xii. 229; P- P. iv. 
412,620; S.A. 1284. 

lightens, P.P. i. 402. 

lighter, P. L. ii. 906, v. 480; 
Com. 962, 

lighteft, P. i. x. 45. 

lightly, P. L. iv. 811, v. 7; 
P. P. ii. 282. 

lights, P. L. i. 228, iii. 437, 
742, iv. 183, 763, 815, v. 
276, vii. 343, 346, 382, x. 

, 833. 

like, P. L. i. 287, 296, 343, 
351, 354, 428, 453, 513, 527, 
537,591,630,711,713,745, 
763,780, 793, ii. 349, 391, 
708, 721, 888, 1013, 1043, 
iii. 363, 367, 445, 568, 588, 
593, 600, 660, iv. 17, 33, 
196, 379, 448, 474, 612, 800, 
806, 825, 833, 858, 987, 
v. 55, 241, 281, 285, 378, 
576, vi. 8, 354, 467, 505, 
573, 620, 662, vii. 15, 44, 
140, 240, 329, 414, viii. 
407, 418, 424, 511, 553, ix. 
99, ISO, 315, 325, 386, 592, 
953, x. 184, 241, 248, 457, 
544, 550, 56l, 673, 693, 
841, 870, 997, xi. 84, 129, 
219, 535,743, xii. 38, 154, 
324, 373, 44S; P. R. i. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



10.5, 258, 282, ii. 143, 156, 
4:57, iii. 424, iv. 55, 147, 
462, 619; S. A. 19, 150, 
53S, 714, 72S, 776, 1137, 
1188, 1497, 1699; Lye. 
106; II Pen/. 69, 174; 
Arc. 16, 18; Cam. 22, 57, 
189, 303, 422, 483, 556, 634, 
655, 727, 743, 753 ; Son. xi. 
10, xxiii. 2 ; Od. Nat. 143 ; 
Od. Pqf. 6; £/>. ill. fflfe 67, 
72; £;>. If 06/ II. 9; P/ii. 
21, iv. 27, vii. 21, lxxx. 3, 
lxxxiii. 51 , lxxxv. 45, lxxxvi. 
25, 28, lxxxviii. 19, 68, 
cxiv. 11, 12. 
not like, P. X. i. 296, iv. 

384. 
too like, P. L. iv. 715. 
like, (verb) P. L. v. 97, vi. 
56l ; P. ii. ii. 321; & A. 

lik'd, P.L. xi. 587; iv. 171. 
likelier, P. X. iv. 527. 
likelieft, P. X. ii. 525, iii. 659, 

vi. 688, ix. 394, 414; P. R. 

i. 121, iii. 130; Com. £0, 

192. 
likely, P. X. iii. 460, iv. 872, 

ix"! 935. 

molt likelv, P. L. ix. 365. 
liken, P.L. "vi. 299. 
likenefs, P. X. ii. ()73, iv. 813, 

viii. 450, x. 327, xi. 321, 

522 ; P. R. i. 3C ; Com. 84, 

528. 
likening, P. X. i. 4S6, v. 573. 
likes, P. X. iv. 738, vi. 353, 

717; P.P. i«. 381. 
likelt, P.L.U.756, iii. 572, vi. 

301; P. R. 11. 237; UPenf. 

9; Cow. 237- 
lik'it, P. X. iv. 281. 
liking, P. X. xi. 587. 
lillied, Arc. 97- 
Ii I lies, Com. 862. 
lilly, 6'on. xx. 8. 
limb, P. X. i. 4U6, ii. 668, iii. 



638, vi. 352, viii. 625, ix 

484 ; S. A. IO89. 
limb by limb, P.L. viii. 267. 
limb'd, P.L. vii. 456. 
limbeck, P. X. iii. 605. 
limber, P. X. vii. 476. 
Limbo, P. X. iii. 495. 
limbs, P. X. iv. 772, x. IO69 ; 

S.A. 571,614; Com. 680, 
lime-twigs, Cow. 646. 
limit, P. X. vi. 140, xii. 145; 

Ep. M. Win. 14. 
limitary, P. X. iv. 971. 
limited, P. X. vi. 229- 
limits, P.L. iv. 384, 964, v.- 

755; Cow. 316; Od. Nat, 

169. 
line, P. L. iv. 210, 282, vii. 480. 

viii. 102, ix. 64 ; II Pen/. 99; 

Com. 923. 
lineaments, P. L. v. 278, vii, 

477; P.P. i. 92. 
lines, Son. xiii. 11 ; £p. W. Sh. 

12. 
linger, 5. A. 466. 
linger'ft, P. P. iii. 227- 
lingering, P. X. ii. 56, 702, xii. 

63S; S.A. 6lS ; Com. 472. 
lining, Cow. 222, 224. 
link, P. X. ix. 914. 
linked, P.L. i. 328, ii. 1005, 

iv. 339, ix. 133, 5)70, x. 905, 

xi. 139 ; L'AL 140. 
link'd, Com. 474 ; Son. i. 8 • 

Ep.Hobf. 11.31. 
links, 5.^. 1410. 
lion, P. X. iv. 343, 402, vii. 

464, viii. 393; P. R. i.313; 

S.A. 12S, 139; P/- vii. 4. 
Liona, P.L. x. 703. 
lionefs, P. X. viii. 393 ; Com. 

443. 
lip, P. X. ii. 614, viii. 56 ; Com, 

752, 915. 
lips, P. X.v. 150,675, viii. 218, 

ix. 1144; Com. 290, 756. 
liquid, P. X. i. 229, 701, iii. 

519, iv. 455, v. 25, vi. 34*, 



- VERBAL INDEX, 

vii. 68, 264, 362, viii. 263, 945, 1479; Lye. 72; UAL 

xi. 570; S.A. 557; Com. 30, 39, 152; II Pen/. l?6 ; 

980; So/2, i. 5 ; Od. Hor. 1. ^rc. 45, 103 ; Cow. 3, 300 

liquour, S. A. 552, 62/ ; Cow. 727, 766; Od. Nat. 90 ; Od. 

65, 652. D. F. I. 77; Od. Sol. Muj 

liquours, P. L. v. 445 ; Com. 847. 28 ; Vac. Ex. 77, 85. 

lift, P. L. ii. 656, 798, iv. 803, live-long, UAL 99 ; Ep. W. 

viii. 75 ; £. ^4. 647 ; Lye. Sh. 8. 

123; Com. 737, 997; Pf. liv'd, P. L. iv. 198, vii. 204, 

lxxxi. 36. viii. 264, 295, ix. 11 66, xi. 

lift, lift, Com. 4S0. 764, xii. 117; -P. R- ii- 201, 

lifted, P. L. xi. 866 ; 5. ^. iii. 41 ; S. A. 264 ; Son. x. 3. 

1087 ; Com 49. livelier, P. L. xi. 242 ; S. A. 

Men, P. P. vi. 9O8 ; Arc. 62 ; 1442. 

Com. 43, 860, 864, 866, 867, livelieft, P. P. i. 274. 

889. lively, P. P. iv. 363, viii, 269, 

liften'd, Cow. 55 1 . 311; P'^Z. 49 ; II Pen/. 149 ; 

liftens, P. P. v. 627 ; Lye. 89. Cow?. 670 ; Od. Paff. 4>7. 

liltening, P. L. vii. 106, 563, x. liver, P. L. vi. 346. 

342; HAL 53; Cow. 203 ; liveried, Cow. 455. 

Od. C«r. 5 ; Vac. Ex. 37- liveries, P. P. vii. 478 ; UAL 62. 

lifts, P. P. iv. 306 ; S.A. 463. livery, P. P. iv. 599; S. A, 

lithe, P. P. iv. 347. l6l6. 

litter, Cow. 554. lives, P. X. ii. 624, iii. 477, iv. 

little, P. L. ii. 1000, iv. 86, 888, ix. 764, 932, 933, xi. 

362, 366, ix. 224, x. 320, 468, 337; P.P. i. 349, iii. 98; 

968 ; P. R. ii. S2, iv. 291 ; Lye. 81. 

S.A. 661, 1599; -fyc. 116; lives, (fubft.)P.L. xi. 621, xii. 

27 Pen/. 3 ; Cow. 27, 642 ; 17; P. P.iii.410; S.A. 1707. 

Od. Nat. 88; Vac. Ex. 10 ; livid, P. P. i, 182. 

Pf. cxiv. 12. living, P. P. i. 433, ii.6l3, 855, 

a little, S. A. 1, 2, 1126, 1050, iii. 327, 443, iv. 287, 

1537; Lye.152. 605, v. 197,652, vi. 846, vii. 

fo little, P. jL iv. 201 ; P. P. 388, 392, 413, 451, 455, 528, 

iv. 6; Od. on Time, 7, 8. 534, 566, viii. 154, 370, ix. 

too little, P. L. x. 600. 228, 539, x. 277, 788, 974, 

Liturgy, Fore, of Con. 2. xi. 160, xii. 1 IS, 527; P. P. 

live, P. L. ii. 194,254,318,500, i.460; S. A. 100; 984, 1140, 

868, iii. 244, 293, iv. 533, v. l66l, l6'73 ; Son. x. 11 ; Ep. 

81, 474, 795, vi. 344, 350, M. Win. 34; Pf. lxxxiv. S, 

4-6l, viii. 152, 176, 182, 276, exxxvi. 85. 

2S1, 340, 341, 633, xi. 653, liv'it, P. L. xi. 553 ; Com. 230. 

688, 829,833,908,910,933, lo, P. L. iii. 486, x. 1050, xi. 

1085, x. 269, 919, 923, 1028, 733 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 5, lxxxvii. 

xi. 38, 95, 158, l6'l, 180,535, 16*. 

554, 629, 802, 872, xii. 299, load, P. L. iv. 972, v. 59, vi. 

351,411, 602: P.P. i. 287, 644; P.P. i. 402; S.A. 214; 

339, iii- 55 1 S. A. 79, 100, Son. xiv. 3 ; Ep. Hobf II. 21, 

vol. 1. 1 



VERBAL INDEX. 

loaded, P. L. iv. 147, viii. 307, vii. 159, 328, 450, viii. 242> 

ix. 577 ; S. A. 149. 454, ix. 26, 30, 87, 138, 3.97, 

loaden, P. R. iv. 418; S.A. 445,601,626,857, 949,106*4, 

1243. 1104, x. 115, 189, 323, 352, 

loads, Son. xxi. 13. 46'9, 482, 509, 573, 964, xi. 

loath. See loth. 494, 581, xii. 146, 26l, 331, 

loathed, L'AL 1. 421 ; P. R. i. 28, 55, 110, 

loath'd, P. L. xii. 178. ii. 15, iii. 279, 36*0, 389, iv. 

loathfome, P. L. iii. 247, xi. 27, 84, 246, 298,6*04; S. A. 

524; S.A. 480, 922; Pf. 171, 476, 592, 86*3, 1125, 

lxxxviii. 43. 126*9,1554; Lye. 35 ; L'AL 

local, P. L. xii. 387. 140; Com. 183*, 1006 ; Son. 

lock, Od.Pa/j:4,5. xiii. 4; 0</. JW. Ill, 134; 

lock'd, Arc. 62. Of/. Paf 7 ; Or/. P>. F. I. 17 ; 

locks, P. L. iii. 36l, 626, iv. Od.oriTime, 11 ; 0d.Muy-J\L 

301, v. 56, x. 559, 1066; 10; Vac.Ex*7\i P/.lxxx. 

S.A.327, 568, 587, 1143, 6*2,lxxxiv. 5,lxxxv.41,cxW. 

116*4; Lye. 112, 175; 1/^/. 2. 

9 ; Cow. 882. longfince, P.R. i. 399,iv. 189 5 

Locrioe, Cow?, 827, 922. ,S. A. 929. 

locufts, P. L. i. 341, xii. 185. long-fufferance, P. X. iii, 198. 

lodge, P. L. iv. 720, 790, v. 377, long-time, P.L. vi. 245, xii. 

vi. 7 ; Cow. 183, 346; Ep. 23, 31 6. 

Hobf I. 15 ; P/. vii. 18. long after, P. L. i. SO, 3S3, iii. 

lodg'd, P. L. vi. 531, vii. 201, 497, v. 3S7. 

viii. 105, xi. 823 ; P.R. ii. not long after, P. L. v. 762. 

6; 6'. A. 48; Cow. 315; long before, P.L. i. 748, iv. 

Son. xix. 4. 213. 

lodges, Com. 246. how long, P. L. xi. I98, 554. 

loftieft, P. L. i. 499, iv. 138, not long, P. #. iv. 107, 618 ; 

lofts, Vac. Ex. 42. S. A. 474, 1033 ; Ep. M. 

lofty, P. L. iii. 734, iv. 395, Win 34. 

xi. 610; P.R. iv. 261 ; i^c. fo long, P.P.iii. 601, ix. 18, 

11 ; Cow. 934; Pf. lxxx. 44. 841; P. 7*. i. 17, 125, ii. 

Logrcs, P. R. ii. 36*0. 32, 304, iii. 41 ; Ep. Hobf. 

loins, P. L. i. 352, v. 282, ix. I. 11. 

1096, x. 9S3, xi. 455, xii. thus long, P. R. ii. 101, iii. 

380,447; Com. 718. 3?8. 

lonelincfs, Com. 404. too long, P. L. iii. 473, ix<, 

lonely, P. L. ii. 82S, xi. 290 ; 7 Itf; if. P. ii. 189; £p- 

// Pat/ 86 j Cum. 200 ; 0J. Wo/;/'. II. 14. 

iW. 181. long-U'vcll'd, Com. 340. 

lon-i, P. /-. i. 195, 507, 659, long-threak<n'd, P. Ii. 1. 59. 

77S,ii. 297,390, 432, iii. 14, long-uncoupled, Od. D. E.l. 13. 

242, 261, 336, 499, iv. 371, long-wander'd, P.L. xii. 313. 

:>3b, v. 113,355,904, vi.331, longer, P. L iii. 56*1, v. 63, vii. 

484,492,538,582,634,6*59, 101, viii. 252, ix. 140, x. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



365, 1003, xi. 48, pi, 259, 
. xii. 336, 437, 594; P.P. ii. 

42 1 ; Com. 577 ; Od. Nat. 225. 
Iongeft, P. R. i. 56. 
longing, P. L. ii. 55, iv. 511, 

ix. 593, 743, x. 877- 
longitude, P. P. iii . 576, iv. 

539, v. 754, vii. 373. 
look, P. L. ii. 106, 307, 418, 

680, iv. 28, 458, 460, 46"2, 

873, v. 800, vi. 469, ix. 397, 

687, 1132, x. 296, 1094, xi. 

897; P. P. ii, 2l6, iv. 

236; S.A>97i 1065, 1068, 

1304; Lye. 163 ; II Penf. 

140; Arc. 1; Com. 870,910; 

Son. xiii. 6 ; Od. Nat. 24 ; 

Vac. Ex.35; Brut. 3 ; Pf. 

lxxx. 57, lxxxiv. 31, lxxxv. 

48. 
look down, P. L. iii. 2o7, 722. 
look up, P. P. iv. 1010 ; S.A. 

197 ; Lye. 125. 
looks, P. P. i. 522, 680, iv. 

291, 464, 570, 718, v. 12, 

122, 331, viii. 474, 616, ix. 

222, 239. 309, 454, 534, 558, - 

x. 111,360,608,919; P-P. 

i. 43; S. A. 533, 1246; Lye. 

13S, 162 ; II Penf. 39; Com. 

450, 464, 777. 
looks, (verb) P. P. i. 595. . 
looks down, P. P. iii. 542. 
look'd, P. P. ii. 91S, iv. 178, 

v. 54, x. 412, xi. 556, 638, 

712, 840; P.P. ii. 86, iii. 

310. 
look'd found, P. L. vi. 529. 
look'd up, P.P. iv. 1013. 
looking, P. X. x. 993, xi. 3S1 ; 

P. P. i. 295, iii. 61. 
looking back, P. L. xii. 641. 
looking down, P.P. xi. 887, 

xii. 60. 
looking forth, P. L. xii. 209. 
looking on, P. P. ix. 312. 
look'ti, P, L. iv, 33, 



loop-hole, Cow. 140. 

loop-holes, P. L. ix. 111Q. 

loofe, P. P. ii. 887, iii- 362, iv, 
497; S.A. 675; Cum. 174, 
292, 464, 863 ; Vac. Ex. 90, 
let loofe, P. L. ii. 155. 

loofely, P. P. vii. 425 5 S. A. 
1022. 

loofening, P; L. vi. 643. 

lop, P. P. iv. 629, ix. 210, 

lopt, P. P. vi 575. 

lopt oft; P. P. i. 459. 

loquacious, P. P. x. l6l. 

Lord, P. P. ii. 236, 699, iv. 51 61. 
943, v. 205, 608, 799, vi.425, 
887," vii. 205, viii. 106, 376, 
ix.l54,235,273,x.4Cl,794, 
xi.257, xii.34,70, 502, 544; 
S. A. 477 ; Son. xviii. 1 ; Od. 
Nat. 60, 76, 242 ; Od. Paf. 
10; Od.Sol.Mvf.22; Pf.u 
15, ii. 5, 9, 14, iii. 1, 7, 15, 
19, 23, iv. 13*28, 42, v. 21, 
vi.1,3, 7, 18,20, vii. 1,7,31, 
viii. 1 , 23, lxxx. 1 7, 78, lxxxi . 
41, 6l, Ixxxiii. 60, lxxxiv. 2, 
6, 13,29,41, 45, lxxxv. 2, 25, 
29,48, lxxxvi. 1,9, 11, 13, 
17, 26, 31, 37,41, 53, 63, 
lxxxvii. 5,21, lxxxviii. 1 , 39, 
53, 57, exxxvi. 2. 

Lord God, P. L. x. 163.* 

lord, Cow. 492, 966 y Pore. 0/ 
Co/?. 1. 

lorded, 5. ^. 267. 

lordlieft, S.A. 1418. 

lordly, P. P. ii. 243, iii. 578 ; 
S.'A. 1353; P/ viii. is, 
lxxxii. 2. 

lords, P. L. i. 32, 194, iv. 290, 
vi. 451, viii. 339, ix. 60S, x. 
467, xi. 803, xii. 93, 349; 
S. A. 251, 4S2, 920, 947, 
1108,1182,1195,1205,1250, 
1310,1318,1371,1391,1411, 
1418,1447,1457,1607,1653 ; 
Com. 73 1. 



1 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

lore, P. L. ii. 815, ix. 1128; 996, 1292, 1743; Arc. 44; 

P. R. i. 483 ; Com. 34. Com. 20, 789; .Son. vii. 11; 

Lofe, P. L. ii. 146*, 325, 483, Od. Nat. 99; Pf viii. 15. 

6*07, v. 21, 731, vii. 153, viii. loth, P. L. iv.386,ix. 946, 1039, 

332, ix. 944, 959, *i. 459, x. 109, xii. 585 ; P. R. hi. 

79S, xii. 358 ; P. R. ii. 98 ; 241 ; Com. 177, 473. 

S.A. 1103; Com. 288, 468 5 loud, P. L. i. 314, 394, 532, 

Od. Nat. 99. ii, 520, 579, 921, iii. 346, 

lofes, P. L. viii. 553 ; P. P. iii. 348, 397, 429, v. 193, vi. 23, 

J04, 59, 557, 567, vii. 271, viii. 

lofing, P. L. iii. 206, 280. 244, x. 455, 641, 699, 845, 

lofs, P. L. i. 4, 188, 265, 526, xii.'56, 229; Pi R- "• 235, 

631, ii. 21, 330, 440, 770, iii. 290, iv. 488; S.A. 248, 436, 

308, 678, iv. 11, 849, 904, 1090,1510, 1552; II Pen/. 

vii. 74, viii. 480, ix. 131, 156; Com. 202, 849; Son. 

912, x. 752, 1019; P. P. ii. xv. 4, xvi.8; Od. Nat. 115, 

29; S.A. 67, 644, 1744; 183,215; Od. Pa J. 26, 55; 

£?/c. 49; ^rc. 100; Com. Od.Sol.Muf.il; Vac. Ex. 

287; Son. xii. 14; Od. Nat. 99; Pf. lxxxi. 124. 

153 ; Od. D. F. I. 72 ; Vac. full loud, P. L. ii. 655. 

£.r. 9. louder, P. L. x. 954. 

at a lofs, P.P. iv. 366. loudeft, P. L. ii. 954, xi. 8; 

loft, P. L i. 55, 105, 106, 136, P. P. i. 275, iv. 339- 

243, 270,312, 316, 471, 591, loudly, Lye. 17 ; Vac. Ex. 24. 

637, ii. 48, 110, 149, 231, love, P. L. i. 431, 491, iii. 29, 

561, 894, 982, iii. 150, 173, 67, 68, 104, 142, 213, 225, 

223, 233, 280, iv. 109, 573, 267,298,312,338,410,411, 

854, vi. 838, ix. 479, 642, iv. 68, 69, 363,465, 499,509, 

784, 900, 1022, 1072, 1165, 728, 743, 750, 763, v. 12, 

x. 374, 574, 929, 945, 1036, 449, 502, 515, 539, 540, 550, 

xi. 59> 87, 288, 347, 682, 593,900, vi. 94, vii. 195,330, 

798, xii. 46, 84, 101, 429, viii. 58, 228, 426, 477, 489, 

6*21; P.R. 1, 2, 154, 377, 569,577,587,589,592,602, 

378,379, 382, 390,419,ii. 19, 612, 6l5, 621, 633, 634, ix. 

97, 416, iii. 204, 377, iv. 188, 240, 241, 263, 286, 319, 335, 

"352, 60S; S.A. 152, 914, 357,475,489,490,492,665, 

#27, 1489, 1502, I697 ; Com. 822, 832, 858, 882, 909, 96 1 , 

52,271,498,510,919; Son. 970, 975, 983, 99\, 1042, 

xxii. 10; Od. Vir. 18$ Pf. 1163, x. Ill, 153, 903, 915, 

Ixxxiii. 16. 960, 973, xi, 353, 553, 588, 

for loft, P. L. ii. 14. 594, xii. 380, 403, 489, 550, 

not loll, /'. L. i. 525, vi. 25, 562,583; P.R. i. 380; S.A. 

594. 270,385, 388, 790, 791, 810, 

Lot, Pf. Ixxxiii. 22. 81:5,836,837,838,863,873, 

Jot, P. L. i. 608, ii. 223, 6 1 7, 923, 1005, 1012, 1033 . tyi, 

iv. 44o', 561, 1011, ix. 690, 177; UAL 30; II Pcnf. 108, 

881, 932, x. 26l, xi. 765; 157; Cora. 124, 332, 6l0; 

P.B. ii. J0 9 $l 9 'ui.57iS.A. 1019; So». i, 7, I3,xiv. i.9, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



xxiii. 11 ; Od. Cir. 15, 16; 

Od. on Time, 16' ; Od. Sol. Muf. 

22; Pf. iv. 10, 11, v. 36, 

lxxx. 34. 
love-darting, Co?n. 753. 
love-labour'd, P. L. v. 41. 
love-lorn, Cora. 234. 
love-quarrels, S. A. 1008. 
love-tale, P. L. i. 452. 
lov'd, P. X. iii. 151, ix. 1007; 

S.J. 878,939; Lye. 36, 51; 

Com. 4,73, 501, 6*23; Pf 

Ixxxi. 47, lxxxvi. 6, Ixxxviii. 

71. 
loved, Pf. Ixxxiv. 4. 
lovelefs, P. jL. iv. 766. 
lovelier, P. L. ix. 232, 505. 
lovelieft, P. L. iv. 321, viii. 558. 
lovelinefs, P. L. viii. 547. 
lovely, P. L. iv. 152, 848, vii. 

502, viii. 471, ix. 504, x. 

152; UAL 14; Com. 875; 

Od. D. F.I. 5 ; £/>. 3J^. JFw. 

24; Pf. lxxx. 36*. 

more lovely, P. L. iv. 714, 
v. 380. 
lover, P. L. iv. 7^9 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 16; Pf. Ixxxviii. 6'9. 
lovers, P.P. iv. 355. 
lover's, P. L. v. 450 ; Son. i. 3. 
love's, P. L. iv. 322, viii. 619, 

ix. 1042, x. 994,, xi. 589; 

S. A. 808, 811 ; Com. 855. 
loves, P. L. iv. S8S, ix. 271 ; 

M Penf 134 ; Son. xii. 12 ; 

Od. Nat. 91 ; P/: lxxxvii. 5. 
loving, P. L. viii. 588, x. 993 ; 

Pf. Ixxxviii. 45. 
lour, S.A. 1057. 
iour'd, P. L. ix. 1002. 
louring, P. L. ii. 490. 
lours, P. L. iv. 873. 
lov'ft, P. L. vi. 733. 
low, P. L. i. 23, 114, 137,435, 

ii. 81, 115, iii. 736, iv. 525, 

v. 360, vii. 288, viii. 126,345, 

350, ix. 169, 180, 572, 704, 

835, x. 92, 6*82, xi. 249,562, 



xii. 97; P. Rl 135,497, ii. 

2S; S. A. 338, 1239; Lye. 

102, 136, 172; Arc. 37, 71; 

Com. 319; Pf v. 20, lxxx. 

49, lxxxii. 15, lxxxvi. 31, 

Ixxxviii. 6l, cxiv. 9- 
low-brow'd, L'Al. 8. 
low-delved, Od. D. F. I. 32. 
low-roof d, P. R. iv. 273 ; 0d» 

Pqf. 18. 
lovv-roolled, Com. 317* 
low-though ted, Com. 6. 
lower, P. L. iii. 540, iv. 76,91, 

v. 410, vii. 18, 84, viii. 199, 

xi. 283 ; S. A. 38, 6S9, 1246*, 
lowering, P. R. iv. 398. 
lowefl, P. L. ii. 392, 882, iv. 

76, 831, v. 158,418, ix. 241, 

x. 443 ; P.P. ii. 438 ; S.A. 

16*9 ;Pf lxxxvi. 47, Ixxxviii. 

25. 
lowings, Od. Nat. 215. 
lowlicfr, P. L. xi. 1. 
lowlinefs, P. jL. viii. 49. 
lowly, P. L. i. 434, .iii. 349, v. 

144, 201, 46*3, viii. 173, 412, 

x. 937 ; Com. 323 ; Od. Nat. 

25. 
loyal, P. L. iv. 755 ; Cow. 320. 
loyalty, P. L. v. 900. 
lubbar, HAL 110. 
lucent, P. L. iii. 589- 
lucid, P. L. i. 46*9, xi. 240. 
Lucifer, P. L. v. 760, vii. 131, 

x. 425 ; Od. Nat. 74. 
Lucina, Ep. M. Win. 26, 2S. 
luck, Vac. Ex. 59. 
lucky, Lye. 20. 
lucre, P. L. xii. 511, 
luggage, P. P, iii. 401. 
lull, P.L. ii. 287; ^>r. 69; 

Vac. Ex. 84. 
lull'd,P.L.iv.771; VAL116; 

Com. 260. 
luminaries, P. L. vii. 1S5, viii. 

luminary, P. jL. iii. 576. 
luminous, P.L. iii. 420, viii. 140. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lure, P. L. ix. 518. 

lur'd, P. L. ii. 66*4, x. 2/6. 

lures, P. ft. ii. 19*. 

lurk, P. L. iv. 587. 

lurking, P. L. ix. 1172. 

lurks, P.L. ix. 267. 

lurk'ft, P.Jtii. 1S3. 

lufcious, Com. 652. 

luft, P.L. i. 417, 495, ii. 791, 

iv. 753, ix. 1015, xi. 795 ; 

P. ft. iv. 137 i 5. ^. 837 ; 

Com. 462. 
luftful, P. L. i. 415, xi. 619. 
luftre, P. L. i. 97, 538, ii. 271, 

iv. 850, x. 44-7, xi. 325; 

P. P. i. 378; Arc. 76. 
lufts, P. Pt. iv. 94. 
lultv, P. ft. ii. 178 ; 0<1. Nat. 

36'. 
lute, P. L. v. 151 ; Com. 478 ; 

Sow. xx. 11 ; OdPaf.28. 
luxuriant, P. L. iv. 260. 
luxurious, P. L. i. 498, ix. 209, 

xi. 788 ; P. ft. iii. 297, iv. 

141. 
luxury, P. L. i. 722, xi. 715, 

751 ; P. ft. iv. Ill ; Com. 

770. 
luz, P. L. iii. 513. 
Lybia, &c. See Libya* 
Lycaeus, ^rc. 98. 
Lyceum, P. ft. iv. 253. 
Lycid, Lj/c. 151. 
Lycidas, Lye. 8, 9, 10, 49, 51, 

166, 172. 
Lydian. UAL 136'. 
lye, P/v. 15. 
King, P. ft. i. 4 29- 
£yones, p. ft. ii. 360. 

lyre, P. L. iii. 17- 

Jyrick, P. ft. iv. 257; & A. 

1737. 
1/it, H. A. 16'()'3. 

It 

Mab, VAl. 102. 
Maccabeus, P. ft. iii. 165. 



]\Iacdonnel, £0;?. xi. 9. 
mace, P. L. x. 294 ; Com. 869, 
JMacedon, P. ft. iv. 271. 
Macedonian, P. ft. iii. 32. 
Machaerus, P. ft. ii. 22. 
machination, P. L. vi. 504. 
machinations, P. ft. i. 181 
mad, P. L. iv. 129; P. ft. iv. 

446; S. A. 1677; Com. 829; 

Pf. v. 12. 
madam, Sou* x. 11. 
madding, P. i. vi. 210. 
made, P. L. i. 248, 258, 370, 

403, ii. 238, 787, iii. 98, 

110, 155, l6'4,'284, 386', iv. 
97, 329, 413, 672, 722, v. 
204, 524, 525, 56l, 599, 823, 
836, 842, vi. 305, 441, 574, 
632, vii. 263, 336, 346, 348, 
36l, 515, 548,viii.381, 409, 
491, 544, 555, 576, 583, ix. 
132, 152, 243, 352, 6'32, 749, 
931, <)43, 1049, x. 146, 149, 
166, 319, 391, 485, 638, 760, 
766, xi. 4, 44, 559, 846, xii. 
70; P. ft. i. 208, ii. 170, 
171, 193, 207, iii. 77, 94, 

111, 442, iv. 101; S. A. 34, 
56, 309, 481, 555, 803, 
1489, 10'22; 11 Pen/. 108; 
Arc. 60 ; Com. 472, 6*42, 
842; Son. xi. 11 ; Od. Nat. 
\\8; Od.D.F.I.A'.Od.SoL 
Muf. 21 ; Vac. Ex. l6; Ep, 
Hobf. II. 5; Pf. ii. 16, vii. 
49, 56, lxx\.72, lxxxvi. 29- 

made aniut-r, P. L. v. 735. 
Madiah, 5. A. 281. 

made lalt, P. L. X. 319, xi. 

737. 
made gay, P. L. vii. 318. 
made halt, P. />. xi. 210. 
made hattr, ft. L. x. 29. 

made head, P. L. ii. 992. 

made way, P. /,. ix. 550. 
madnefs, P. L. xi. 486"; S, A 9 

553; CW. 26'1. 
madrigal, Com. 495. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



wad'ft, JP. L. i, 22, iv. 724, x. 
lS7lPf.mil 15, 17. 

Msenalus, ^rc. 102. 
Masonides, P. X. iii. 35* 
Maeotis, P. X. ix. 78. 
magazine, P. X. iv. 8l6. 
magazines, S. A. 1281, 
Magellan, P. X. x. 6'87. 
inagick, P. X. i. 727; 5, A. 

11494 Co??2. 165, 435, 79$. 
magician, Com. 602. 
magician's, S. A. 1133. 
magiltrates, S. A. 850, 1183. 
magnanimity, S. A. 1470. 
magnanimous, P. X. vii. 511; 

P. P. ii. 583 ; S. A. 524. 
magnetick, P. X. iii. 583; P. it 

ii. 168. 
magnifick, P. X. v. 773, x. 354. 
magnificence, P. X. i. 718, ii. 

273, viii. 101; P. P. iv. 111. 
magnificent, P. X. iii. 502, vii. 

56'8, x. 153. 
magnified, P. X, vii. 6()6 ; S. A. 

440. 
magnify, P. X. vii. 97- 
magnitude, P. X. ii. 1053, vii. 

357; S.A. 1279- 
magnitudes, P. X. viii. 17. 
Mahanaim. P. L. xi. 214. 
Maia's, P. X.t. 285. 
maid, P. X. v. 223 ; P. R. ii. 

200 ; X'^tf/. 95 ; 0</. JVaf. 3. 
maiden, Com. 402, 843; 0t/. 

Nat. 42. 
maidenhood, Cow. 855. 
maiden's, Vac. Ex. 9& 
maids, Od. Nat. 204. 
majeftick, P. X. ii. 305, viii. 42; 

P. R. ii. 2l6, iv. 110, 359; 

II Pen/. 34 ; Com. 870. 
majefty, P. X. ii. 266, iv. 290, 

607, vi. 101, vii. 195, viii. 

509, xi. 232; P. P. ii. 159; 

Arc. 2 ; Com. 430 ; Od. Nat. 

9; E P . M. Win. 70; P/. 

cxxxvi. 90. 



mail, P. X. v. 284, vi. 36S; 

P.R. iii. 312, 313. 
maim'd,P.X.i.459;S.^.1221. 
main, (fubft.) P. X. vi. 698, x. 

257 ; Com. 28 ; P/.' cxxxvi. 46. 
main, P. X. ii. 121, iii. 83, iv. 

233, vi. 216, 243, 471, 654, 

vii. 279, xii. 431 ; P. R. i. 

112, iv. 457; S. A. l606 2 

1634 ; Son. xvii. 8. 
mainly, P. X. xi. 519. 
maintained, P. X. vi. 30. 
make, P. X. i. 255, ii. 113, v. 

70, 829, vii. 519, viii. 484, 

ix. 127, 778, 866, x. 6ll, 

798, 1028, xi. 680; P.R. i. 

223, iiL 363; S. A. 425, 

560, 956, 1331; Lye. 116; 

Com. 227, 617, 654, 846, 

1008; Od.D.F. I. 77; Vac. 

Ex.31; Pf. vL 12, lxxx. 55, 

lxxxiii. 49, lxxxvi. 10, cxiv. 

18, cxxxvi. 13. 
make appear, P. L. x. 29. 
make known, P. L. ix. 817. 
make fliort, P. L. x. 1000. 
make Aire, P. L. x. 402. 
make up, Od. Nat. 132. 
Maker, P. X. i. 486, ii. 915, 

iii. 113, 676, iv. 292, 725, 

748, v. 148, 184, 551, 858, 

vii. 116, viii. 278, 380, 485, 

ix. 177, 33S, 538, x. 43, 743, 

xi 6ll ; Soti. xix. 5. 
Maker's, P. L. iv. 380, viii. 

101, xi. 514,515 \0d.Nat. 43. 
makes, P. X. iii. 290, vi. 7, 

458, 697, xi. 651, 892, xii. 

167; P. P. iv. 362; Cow. 

126, 133; Pf.v. 11. 
makTt, P/. iv. 42, lxxx. 23, 25, 

lxxxviii. 34. 
making, P. X. iii. 113, v. 858, 

ix. 138; S.^. 1289- 
Malabar, P. X. ix. 1103. 
maladies, P. X. xi. 480 ; S. ^. 

6*08. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



male, P. L. i. 422, vii. 529, 
viii. 150. 

malecontent, P. R. ii. 392. 

malediction, S. A. 978. 

males, P. L. xii. 168. 

malice, P. L. i. 217, ii. 382, 
iii. 158, 400, iv. 49, 123, v. 
666, vi. 270, 502, ix. 55, 
306,461; P.P. i. 149,424; 
S. 4.821; Com. 587- 

malicious, P. L. ix. 253; S. A. 
1251. 

malign, P. L. iii. 553, iv. 503, 
vi. 313, vii. 189- 

malignant, P. L. x. 662, xii. 
538. 

Mammon, P. L. i. 67 S, 679, »« 
228, 291. 

man, P. L. i. 4, 462, 573, ii. 
348, 504, 1023, iii. 90, Q3, 
130,131,145,150, 173,203, 
227, 232, 238, 277, 283, 294, 
295, 316, 400, 404, 6*63, 668, 
682, iv. 113, 323, 566, 6l8, 
749, v. 60, 117, 405, 462, vi. 
345, vii. 332, 347, 519, 524, 
viii. 72, 103, 226, 250, 297, 
361,397, 410, 422, 445, ix. 
2,7, 56, 113, 152, l?6 } 346 f 
553,666,691,710,711,716, 
726, 746, 772, 933, x. 19, 
41, 62, 97, 101, 170, 209, 
227,483, 489, 4<j2, 496, 571, 
577, 607, 744, 79 r ^ 803, 846, 
xi. 23, 46, 84, 124, l6l, 239, 
240, 451,508,511,681,733, 
770,777,818,872,890,895, 
xii. 7, 69, 74, 86,90, 113, 
293,298,313, 382, 424,425, 
493; P. R. i. 36, 91, 132, 
140, 1 50, 1 5 1, 1 66, 234, 314, 
327,349,403,404,405,484, 

• ii. S3, 135, 136, 298, 468, 

477, iii. 62, 134, 230, iv. 

10,220, 301, 304,311,461, 

471, 535, 538; S. A. 1 \, 

140, 319, 667 , 835, 844, 

i4, 1224, 1226, 1233 



1375, 1390 ; Cow. 163,362; 
Son. x. 8, xiii. 7, xxii. 6 ; 
tfor. I. 1; P/i. l,v. 38, vii. 
. 12, 13, lxxx. 69, 71, Ixxxii. 
11, lxxxiv. 46, lxxxvii. 16, 
19, 24,lxxxviii. 15. 
"Man of men, P. U. i. 122. 
of man, P. L. i. 366, ii. 629, 
iii. 632, 724, iv. 177, 660, 
705, vii. 114, viii. 496, 
585, ix. 291, x. 9, 619, 
713, 784, xi. 102, 497, 
782, 786, 822, 886. 
on man, P. L. i. 219, iv. 11, 
viii. 228, x. 401, 797, xi. 
467, xii. 73> 
one man, P. L. vii. 155, ix. 
545, xi. 219, 808,876. 
manacled, P. L. i. 426. 
manacles, S. A. 1309. 
manag'd, P. L. viii. 573. 
management, P. R. i. 12. 
Manaffe's, Pf. lxxx. 10. 
mane, P. L. vii. 466, 497- 
manger, P. P. i. 247 ; P. P- ». 

75; Od.Nat. 31. 
mangle, S. ^. 624. 
mangled, P. L. vi. 368. 
manhood, P. L. iii. 314, x. 
148, xi. 246. xii. 389; P. -R. 
iv. 509; 6'.^. 408; Sow. vii. 
6. 
manifeft, P. J/, vi. 707, vii. 
615, viii. 422, x, 66; S. A. 
997 • 
manifold, P. L. iv. 435, viii. 

29, x. 16. 
mankind, P. L. i. 36, 368, ii. 
383, iii. 66, l6l, 275, iv. 10, 
107, 718, v. 388, 5()6, vii. 
530, viii. 358, 57.9, 650, ix. 
376, 415, 494, 950, x. 498, 
646, 895, xi. 1:), 38,69,500, 
696, 752, 891 ; P. P. i. 3, 
1 14, 187, 266, 387, iii. 82, 
iv. 635. 

all mankind, P. L. iii. 222, 
286, iv. 315, v. 228, x. 



VERBAL INDEX, 

S22,xi. 159, xii. 276, 417, as many, P. L. ii. 938, xii. 

6*01. 425. 

mankind's, P. L. xii. 235. as many as, P. P. iii. 289- 

man-like, P. L. viii. 471. how many, P. J,, xii. 26l, 

manlier, P. R. ii. 225. 262; P. P. i. 48 ; P/. iii. 

manlieft, P. P. ii. 167. 1, 2. 

manly, P.L.iv. 302,490; Cow, fo many, P. P. iii. 6ll, iv. 

289. 429, v. 567, vi. 24, viii. 

manna, P. P. ii. 113 ; P. P. i. 28, xi. 323, xii. 282,283; 

251, ii. 312. P. P. iv. 482; S. A. 65, 

manner, P. P. i. 50. 287. 

manners, P. P. iv. 83. loo many, S. A. 1401. 

Manoah, S. A. 328, 1441, many m.ore, P. X. iii. 473, ix. 

1548, 1565. 730 ; P. P. ii. 188. 

man's, P. X. i. 1, iii. 215, 218, maple, Com. 391. 

304, 355, 410, iv. 317, 692, marafmus, P. L. xi. 487. 

v. 483, ix. 106'9, x. 60, 631, marble, P. L. iii. 564; P. P. 

823, xi. 632, 634, xii. 265; iv. 60 ; 1/ Pew/. 42; Cow. 

P. P. i. 2, 4, 402, iv. 459; 9l6; Od. Nat. 195; Ep.M, 

S. A. 656; Son. xix. 10 ; Pf. Win. 1 ; Ep. W. Sh. 14. 

lxxxii. 10. march, P. L. i. 413, ii. 574, 

manfion, P. L. i. 268, ii. 462, 6l5, v. 688, vi. 72, x. 474; 

iii. 699, vi. 738, viii. 296; P. R. i. 115. 

II Pen/. #2; Cow. 2; Pf. march'd, P. P. vi. 77. 

cxxxvi. 93. marches, P. P. iii. 303. 

manfions, Od. Nat. 140. marching, P. L. i. 488, ii. 8S6 5 

manflaughter, P. P. xi. 693. xii. 40. 

mantle, P. P. iii. 10, iv. 609 ; Marchionefs, Ep. M. Win. 74, 

Lye. 104, 192; Od. PaJJl 30. Margaret, Son. x. 14. 

mantling, P. P. iv. 258, v. 279? margent, Com. 232. 

vii. 439 ; Com. 294. Margiana, P. P. iii. 317. 

manuring, P. P. iv. 628, xi. 28. mariner, P. P. iv. 558. 

many, P. P. i. 128, 196, 700, mariners, Com. 48. 

709, 727, 733, ii. 548, 618. marifh, P. L. xii. 630. 

619, 620, 651, 929, iii. 465, maritime, P. L. xi. 398. 

642, 741, iv. 164, 229, 234, mark, P. P. iv. 400, 962, v. %\, 

v. 101, 346, vi. 76, 77, 336, ix. 92, 528, xii. 50 ; P. P. 

387, 624, 658, vii. 144, ix. iii. 349; S. A. 496; Arc. 14; 

183, 434, 517, 6l 8, x. 274, Son. xii. 13 ; Pf. vi. 15. 

311, 438, 1005, 1084, xi. mark'd, P. L. iv. 129, 401, 

254, 256, 351, 467, 468, 568 ; P. P. i. 297. 

534, 767, xii. 530, 602 ; marks, P. P. iii. 6l. ' 

P. P. i. 118, 264, ii. 80, 89, marie, P. L. i. 296. 

155, iii. 269, 315, iv. 55, Marocco, P. L. i. 584, xi. 404. 

321, 411, 478 ; S. A. 652, marr'd, P.P. iv. lid, ix. 136. 

918, 1260 ; L'AL 95, 101; marriage, P. L. v. 223, viii. 

Com. 949; Pac. Ex. 74 ; P/. 487, xi. 591; S. A. 224, 

pi 4, 15, iv. 25. 320 ; Ep. M. Win, 18. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



marriage-choices, S. A. 420, 
marriage-faith, S. A. 111^. 
marriageable, P. L. v. 217. 
marriages, P. X. xi. 684. 
married, L'AL 137- 
marrying, P. X. xi. 71 6. 
Mars, P. R. iii. 84. 
mariliall'd, P. X. ix. 37- 
martial, P. X. i. 540 ; P. R. iii. 

304. 
martyr'd, Sow. xviii. 10. 
martyrdom, P. X. ix. 32. 
marvelling, P. X. ix. 551. 
Mary, P. X. v. 387, x. 183; 

P.P. ii. 60, 105; Son Ax. 5. 
mafculine, P. X. x. 890. 
mafk, P. X. iv. 76S; L'AL 128 ; 

6'ow. xxii. 13 ; Od. Pqf. 19. 
mafs, P. X. iii. 708, vii. 237, 

xii. 548. 
mafiacre, P. X. xi. 679. 
many, P. X. i. 285, 703, ii. 

878, v. 634, vi. 195, xi. 565', 

S. A. 147, 1633, l6"4S; Lye. 

110; II Pen/. 158. 
maft, P. X. i. 293. 
matter, Com. 725 ; Od. JV'ttf. 34. 
mailer-work, P. L. vii. 505. 
mafters, S. A. 1215; Cow. 501. 
matters', S. //. 1404. 
mattering, P. X. ix. 125. 
mattery, P. L. ii. 899, ix. 29- 
match, P. L. vi. 631; S. A. 

346, 1164. 
match'd, P. X. ii. 720, xi. 685. 
matching, P. X. v. 113. 
matchlefs, P. X. i. 623, ii. 

487, iv. 41, vi. 341, 457, x. 

404; P. P. i. 233, iv. 10; 

S. A. 178, 280, 1740; Son. 

xvi. 3. 
raate,P. L.i. 192, 238, iv. 828, 

vii. 403, viii. 578, 594, x. 

*<)9; 8, A. 173; Son. i. 13 ; 

Gtf. D. F. I. 24. 
material, P. 7.. iii. 709. 
materials, P. X. ii. 916, vi. 478. 
mate*, P. X. vi. 60s. 



matin, P. X. v. 7, vi. 526, vii. 

450; L'AL 114. 
matrimonial, P. X. i x . 319* 

5. ^. 959. 
matron, P. X. i. 505, xi. 136; 

S.A. 722', Od. D. F. I. 54. 
matron-lip, P. L. iv. 501. 
matrons, £/>. M. Win. 23. 
matter, P. L. i. 256, iii. 413, 

613, v. 472, 563, 738, vii. 

233, ix. 669, 951, 1177, x. 

807, 1071 ; S.A. 1638; Soji. 

xi. 2. 
matters, P. L f viii. 167 ; P. P. 

iv.329; S.A, 1348. 
mature, (verb) P. L. i. 660, x, 

612 ; P. P. iv. 282. 
mature, P. X. v. 862, ix. 803, 

x. 822, xi. 537; P. P. i. 188, 

iii. 37. 
matureft, P. L. ii. 115. 
maugre, P. L. iii. 255, ix. 56; 

P.P. iii. 368. 
maw, P. X. ii. 847, x. 601, 

991 ; Son. xvi. 14. 
maxim, S.A. 865. 
May, Son. i. 4; Od. May-M. 

3,5. 
may-flowers, P. L. iv. 501. 

a-maying, X'^/. 20. 
maze, P. X. ix. 499; P- #• "> 

246; Od. Nat. 236. 
mazes, P. L. ii. 56l, v. 622, x. 

830; UAI.U2; Com. 181. 
mazy, P. X. iv. 239, ix. l6l. 
me ! me, P. X. x. 936. 
mead, UAL 90. 
meadow, P. P. ii. 185. 
meadow-ground, P. L. xi. 648. 
meadows, P. X. vii. 46*0; UAL 

75 ; Com. 844. 
meads, Ftfc. X\r. 94. 
meager, P. X. x. 264; Com. 

434. 
mean, P. X. ii. 684, iii. 272, 

iv. 632, v. 723, vi. 120,290, 

viii. 527, ix. 553, 860, 1152, 

xi. 879 i P. P. i. 155, ii. 6, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



*5L 404, iv. l6l ; S. A. 207 ; 

HAL 152; Cow, 417, 418. 
mean, (adj.) P. L. ii. 981, iv. 

02, vi. 421, viii.473, ix. 39, 

xi. 9, xii. 351; S.4- 207; 

/Sow. vii. 11, xxi. 2. 
Meander's, Cow. 232. 
meaner, P. L. vi. 367. 
meaneft, P. L. iv. 204, xi. 231. 
meaning, P. P. vii. 5, ix. 1019; 

P. ii. iv. 516; S. A. 813; 

Com. 754, 
meanly, Od. Nat. 31. 
means, P.L. i. l65, iii. 228, x. 

1062, xii. 234, 279; P. P. 

ii. 412, iii. 89, 355, 356, 

394, iv. 152, 475; S. A. 

315, 444, 56*2, 603, 795; 

Com. 644, 821. 
means, (verb) Com. 765 ; Son. 

xvii. 10. 
mean'ft, P. P. iv. 230. 
meant, P. P. iii. 5l6, v. 513, 

vi. 854, ix. 690, x. 545, 

1033, 1050, xii. 149; P. R. 

i. 83, ii. 99; II Pen/. 120; 

Arc. 35; Com. 57 8, 591; Pf. 

vii. 10. 
mean-while, P. L. i. 752, ii. 

629, 767 t iii. 333, 418, iv. 

260, 539, 633, v. 350, 443, 

503,711, vi. 186, 293, 354, 

493, vii. 162, 192, 417, ix. 

739, x. 1, 229, 585, xi. 133, 

738, xii. 315; P. R. i. 183, 

ii. 1 ; S. A. 479, 604 ; Lye. 

32 ; Com. 102. 
meafure, (verb) P. L. vii. 603 ; 

Son. xxi. 9- 
meafure, P. L. i. 513, v. 517, 

639, vi. 265, vii. 128, 640, 

ix. 846; S. A. 1439; Son. 

vii. 10. 

without meafure, P. L. iii. 142. 
meafur'd, P. L. iv. 776, xi. 

730, xii. 554; P. P. i. 210; 

Arc. 71 ; Son. xiii. 1. 
meafures, P. L. i. 50, v. 581 ; 

P. P. i. 1/0; UAL 70, 



meafuring, P. X. vi. 893, 
meat, Pf. lxxxi. 63. 
meaths, P. P. v. 345. 
meats, P. P. v. 451, xi. 473; 

P.P. ii. 265, 328, 341. 
med'cinal, S.A. 627; Com. 636. 
meddling, Com. 846. 
Medes, P.P. iii. 376. 
Media, P, P. iv. 171 ; P. £. 

iii. 320. 
mediation, P f L. iii. 226. 
Mediator, P. L. x. 60, xii. 240. 
meditate, Lye. 66; Com. 547. 
meditated, P. L. ix. 55. 
meditation, P.L. xii. 605 ; Com, 

386; P/v. 2. 
meditations, P. P. i, 195. ii* 

110. 
Medufa, P.L. ii. 6ll. 
Medway, Vac. Ex. 100, 
meed, Pyc. 14, 84. 
meek, P. P. iii. 266, iv. 494, 

v. 359, viii. 217, x. 1032, 

1104, xi. 162,437, 451, xii. 

569, 597; P. P. iii. 217, iv. 

401, 636; S.A. 1036; Lye. 

178 ; Pf. iv. 15. 
meek-ey'd, Od.Nat. 46. 
meekly, P.R. ii. 108 ; Son. xiv. 

3; 0d.Paff.2l. 
meet, P. L. ii. 64, 722, 955, 

iv. 530, 913, v. 350, vi. 

93, 439, 882, viii. 57, 139, 

609, ix. 360, 847, 1176, x. 

103. 349, 599, 775, 905, xi. 

237, 240; S.A. 1123; Arc. 

31 ; Com. 363 ; Son. xx\ 3 ; 

P/. viii. 20. 
meet, (adj.) P. P. iii. 234, 675, 

viii. 448,ix. 711, 1028,xi.6"04. 
meeting, P. L. v. 778, x. 350, 

879 ; -P. R- iii- 258 ; L'AL 

138. 
meets, P. P. ii. 931, iv. 154, 

540, 784, ix. 271 ; P. P. iv. 

320; IlPenf. 120. 
meet'ft, P. L. v. 175. 
Megasra, P. L. x. 560. 
melancholy, P. L. xi. 485, 544 ; 



VERBAL INDEX, 



L'AL 1 ; II Pen/. 12,62, 175; 
Com. 546, 810. 

Melefigenes, P. R. iv. 259. 

Melibaean, P. L. xi. 242. 

Melibseus, Com. 822. 

Melind, P. L. xi. 3.99- 

mellifluous, P. L. v. 429 5 P. R* 
iv. 277. 

mellowing, Lye. 5. ' 

melodious, P. X. iii. 371, v. 
196, 656, xi. 559 ; Lye. 14; 
Ocl. Nat. 129; Otf. <SW. Muf. 
18; Vac. Ex. 51. 

melody, P. L. viii. 528. 

melt, P. L. iv. 389 ; Od. Nat. 
138. 

melted, P. L. xi. 566. 

melting, X/^/. 142. 

member, P. L. ii. 66*8. 

membrane, P. L. viii. 625. 

Memnonian, P. -L. x. 308. 

Memnon's, II Pen/. 18. 

memorable, P. P. iii. 96 ; 5. ^. 
956. 

memorial, P. X. i. 362, vi. 355. 

memorials, P. L. v. 593. 

memory, P. L. iv. 24, vi. 379, 
vii. 66, 637, viii. 650, xi. 
154,325, xii. 46; Com. 206 ; 
£/>. TF. Sk. 5; P/*. lxxxiii. 
16. 

Memphian, P. L. i. 307, 694 ; 
Od. Nat. 214. 

men, P. L. i. 332,685,740, ii. 
288, 483, 497, iii. 268, 283, 
287, 331, iv. 4, 295, 675, 
753, v. 493, vii. 183, 570, 
625, ix. 622, x. 893, xi.477, 
577, 585, 662, 676, 680, 688, 
838, xii. 30, 48,6*9, 115, 245, 
248, 554,438,538; P.P. i. 
164, 167,191; 237,250, 322, 
341, 386, 464, 482, ii. 27, 
133,154, 180, 192,228,437, 
447, 470, iii. 85, 105, Ml, iv. 
140, 197,200,357,462, 466, 
520; S. A. 215, 294, 332, 
354, 364, 545, 6*74, 787, 847, 
867,892,903,9197938.1034, 



1079,1186,1273, 1407,1682; 

L'AL 13 ; Arc. 67 ; Com. 6, 

388,445,703; 0rf.JVaM42; 

Od. D. F. I. 62 ; Ep. Hobf. 

II. 11; Fore, of Con. 9; 

Eitrip. 1 ; Pf. i. 14, 16, iii. 

22, v. 12, lxxxii. 15, 23, 

Ixxxv. 48, lxxxvi. 50. 

of men, P. L. iii. 46, 412, 
447, 453, 6*79,iv. 323,408, 
v. 71, 72, 56*3, 76l, vi. 376, 
505, vii. 156, 623, 626, 
viii. 218, 297, xi. 360,621, 
640, 697, xii. 13, 80. 

to men, P. L. i. 26, 51, 374, 
ii. 496, iv. 613, xi. 580, 
677, xii. 477. 
menace, Com. 654. 
menae'd, P. L. ix. 977* 
mends, P. L. x. 859. 
men's, P. R. i. 132. 
mens, Com. 208. 
mental, P. L. xi. 418. 
mention, P.L.ii.820, viii. 200; 

P.R.i. 45, iii. 92; S. A. 331, 

1254; Pf. lxxxvii. 11, 13. 
mention'd, P. L. x. 1041 ; S.A. 

978. 
merchants, P. L. ii. 639- 
mercies, Pf. v. 17, 18, exxxvi. 

3, 95. 
merciful, P.L. xii. 565; Pf. 

lxxxvi. 56. 
"Mercury, Coin. 962. 
mercy, P. L. i. 218, iii. 132, 

134, 202, 401, 407, x. 59, 

78, 1096, xii. 346; S. A. 

1500; Com. 695; Od. Nat. 

144; Pf. Ixxxv. 41, lxxxvi. 

15, 45, 58. 
mercy-feat, P. L. xi. 2, xii. 253. 
mere, P. L, iv. 3l6, ix. 413 ; 

P. R. iv. 535; Com, 807. 
merely, P. /,. v. 774, viii. 22 ; 

Od. on Time, 6-, Ep. Hobf. II. 

15. 
Meriba, P/*. lxxxi. 32. 
meridian, P. /,. iv. 30, 5 1, V. 

369. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



merit, P. X. i. 98, ".5,21, iii. 
290, 309, v. 80, vi. 43,vii. 157, 
x.259,xi.35; P.JR.i. l66. 
merit, (verb) P. X. i. 575; 

P. JR. ii. 455. 
merited, P. X. iv. 418, vi. 153, 

x. 388*; S.^. 734. 
meritorious, S. A. 859* 
merits, P. X. iii. 697, vi. 382, 

ix. 995, xi. 699. 
merits, (fubft.) P, X. iii. 319, 

xii. 409. 
merriment, Com. 172. 
Meroe, P. R. iv. 71. 
merry, Co?w. 121. 
meffiioe, P. X. iv. 823, v. 289, 
290, xi. 299, xii. 174; P. R. 
i. 133 ; S. A. 635, 1307, 
1343, 1345, 1352, 1391,1433. 
meffenger, P. X. viii. 646, xi. 
856; P. jR. i. 238; S.A. 
1384. 
meffengers, P. X. iii. 229, vii. 

572. 
m.eiTes, UAL 85. 
Meffiah, P. X. v. 664, 691, 765, 
883, vi. 43, 68, 718, 775, 
796, 881, xii. 244,359; P. #. 
i. 245, 26l, 272, ii. 32,43, iv. 
502 ; P/ ii. 5. 
met, P. X. i. 574, ii. 742, iii. 
613, iv. 231, 322, 496, 863, 
vi. 18, 128, 131, 156, 247, 
323, 532, 688, ix. 325, 449, 
S49, x. 285,321, 349, 390, 
xi.213,722;P.#.ii.359,iii. 
37, iv. 22,385 ; S.A. 1588, 
l656;L'AL83;HPe?ijr.<28; 
Com. 165, 572; Son. xiii. 14 ; 
Pf. lxxxv. 42, lxxxvi. 50. 
metal, P. X. i. 540, iii. 592, 

595, v. 442, xi. 573. 
metallick, P. X. j. 673. 
metals, Lye. 110. 
meteor, P. X. i. 537. 
meteorous, P. X. xii. 629- 
methinks, P. L. v. 114, x. 243, 
1029 ;S.A. 368 ; &w. x.ll. 



method, P. #. iv. 540. 
methought, P. X. iv. 478, v. 35, 

50, 85, 91, viii. 295,355,462, 

xi. 151 ; S.A. 1515; Com. 

171, 482; Son. xxiii. 1. 
metropolis, P. X. iii. 549, x. 

439. 
Mexico, P. X. xi. 407. 
Michael, ii. 294, vi. 44, 202, 

250,321, 411, 686, 777, xi. 

99, 295, 334, 412, 453, 466, 

515, 530, 552, 603, 683, 7$7 9 

xii. 79, 285, 386, 466, 
mickle, Com. 31. 
microfcope, P. R. iv. 57. 
mid, P. X. ii. 718, iii. 729, iv. 

940, vii. 442; Com. 957; 

Son. ix. 13. 
Midas, Son. xiii. 4, 
mid-air, P. X. vi. 536 ; P. H. i, 

39. 
mid-courfe, P. X. xi. 204. 
mid-day, P. X. viii. 112 ; Com. 

384. 
middle, P. X. i. 14, 5l6, ii. 

653, iii. 16, 46l, iv. 195, v. 

280, 339, ix. 605, 1097, xi. 

665 ; P. R. ii. 117; Od.Nat. 

164; Od. D.F.I. 16. 
mid-heaven, P.L. vi. 889, ix. 

468, xii. 263. 
mid-hours, P. X. v. 376. 
midnight, P. X. i. 782, iv. 682, 

768, v. 66Y, ix. 58, 159, xii. 

189; L'Al. 2; UPenf. 85; 

Com. 103, 130 ; Od. Nat. 191. 
midnight-march, P. X. v. 778. 
midnight-fearch, P.L. ix. 181» 
mid-noon, P. L. v. 311. 
mid-fea, P. X. vii. 403. 
mid-fey, P. X. vi. 314. 
mid-volley, P. X. vi. 854. 
mid-way, P. X. vi. 91, xi. 631, 
Midian, Pf. lxxxiii. 33. 
midriff, P. X. xi. 445. 
midft, P. X.i.224. ii. 508, iii. 

358, v. 165, 251, vi. 28, 99, 

417, ix. 184, x, 441, 528, xi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



452; P. JR. ii. 294, iv. 31; 

S.A. 1339; Od.Nat. 11. 
might, P.L. i. 110, 506, 643, 

ii. 192, iii. 170, 398, iv.346, 

986, v. 720, vi. 116, 229, 

320,355,377,630,710,737, 

vii. 165,223, 615, x. 404, xi. 

689, 830; S. A., 17S, 588, 

1083,1271, 1293; Lye. 173 ; 

Com. 613 ; Brut. 13; Pf. 

Ixxx.l2,lxxxii.7,25,lxxxiii. 

17, exxxvi. 25. 
mightier, P. L. i. 149, 512, vi. 

32. 
mightieft, P. L. i. 99, ii. 307, 

vi. 112,200, 386/459, 710, 

xi.387;P--R.iii. 262;^.^. 

638. 
mighty, P. L. i. 20, 136, 222, 

533, 566, 66*5, ii. 456, 508, 

719, 991, v. 735, 748, 836, 

vi.62,6'38, 841, 890, vii. 355, 

608, viii. 81, x. 455, 650, xi. 

642, xii. 33, 124; P. R. i. 40, 

186, ii. 448, iii. 167 ; S.A. 

556, 706, 1272, 1602; Com. 

63 ; Od. Nat. 89 ; Vac. Ex. 

51 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 49, exxxvi. 

90. 
mild, P. L. ii. 220, 397, 546, 

iv. 479, 647, 654, v. 16, 371, 

vi. 28, vii. 110, ix. 226, x. 

67,96, 847, 1046, xi. 151, 

234, 286; P. R. i. 310, ii. 

125, 159, i v. 134; Lye. 136 ; 

Son. xix. 11, xxi. 11; Od. 

Nat. 66 ; Od. Paf}\ 53 ; Pf. 

lxxxvi. 53. 
milder, P. L. ii. 8l6, vi. 98 ; 

S071. xiii. 14. 
mildew, Com. 640. 
mildly, P. L. viii. 317- 
mildnefs, P. L. vi. 735, ix. 534. 
Mile End Green, Son. xi. 7, 8. 
miles, P.L. ii. 938. 
militant, P. L. \j, 61 , \. 442. 
military, P. /,. iv. p55, vi. 45, 

xi. 241 J P.H. in. 312. 



milk, P. Z. ix. 5S2. 

milk-maid, L'Al. 65. 

milky, P. X. v. 306, vii. 579; 
S. A. 550. 

mill, 6'. A. 41 , 1093, 1 327, 1393. 

millions, P. L. 1..609, 664, ii. 
55, 997, iv.' 677, vi. 48, 220; 
P.P. i. 359; Com. 715; Pf 
iii. 15. 

mimick, P. L. v. 110. 

mimicks, S. A. 1325. 

Mincius, Lye. 86. 

mincing, Co?n.g64>. 

mind, P. L. i. 97, 139, 253, 254, 
626, ii.34, 189, iii. 52, 705, 
iv. 55,-618, v. 34, 117, 452, 
902, vii. 128, viii. 188,525, 
541, 557, 604, ix. 213, 238, 
603, 77 9, 1120, 1125, x. 8, 
825, 1011, 1015, xi. 144,687, 
xii. 444; P.R. i. 202, ii. 105, 
139, 206,479, iv. 223, 401; 
S.A. IS, 52, 185, 412, 600, 

611, 745, 792, 1638, 1758; 
Lye. 71 ; IlPenf. 4, 91 ; Com. 
211, 46l,6l9; Son. xxiii. 8; 
Vac. Ex. 33; Pf. lxxxi. 50, 
lxxxiii. 18, exxxvi. 1. 

mind, (verb) P. L. ii. 212, iv. 

612, vi. 477, ix. 358; P.R. 
ii. 258. 

minded, P. L.iv. 583, viii. 444, 

ix. 519, xi. 156; S. A. 1603. 
mindlefs, P. L. ix. 431. 
minds, P. L. i. 559, ii. 521, iv. 

118, 522; v. 6S0, 786, vi. 

444, 613, ix. 1053, xii. 15; 

S.^,1213, 1279,1336, 1387, 

150S, 1676. 
mine, P. L. v. 443, xi. 656; 

Com. 436. 
mineral, P. L. \. 235, vi. 517. 
Minerva, Com. 448. 
mingle, /'. L. ii. 384, vi. 277 ; 

P.R. iv. 453. 

mingled, P. L. vi. 513; Com* 

924. 
minims, P, L. vii. 482. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



minifter, P. L: v. 460, xi. 73, 

xii. 308 ; P. P. i. 488;S.^. 

706. 
minifteries, P. £• vii. 149. 
minifters, P. L. i. 170, ix. 156, 

xi. 6/6; P. P. ii. 3/5. 
miniftrant, P. L. x. 87; P.P. 

ii. 385. 
miniftred, P. X. v. 444. 
miniftring, P. L. iv. 664, vi. 167, 

182. 
miniftry, P. L. xii. 505. 
minftrelfy, P. -L. vi. 168; Cow. 

547. 
mintage, Cow. 529* 
minute, II Pen/. 130. 
minutes, P. L. ix. 91. 
miracle, P. L. ix. 562; P.P. i. 

337; S.A. 364, 1528. 
miracles, P. L. xii. 501 ; P/I 

cxxxvi. 13. 
mire, P. L. iv. 1010 ; Son. xx.2. 
mires, P. L. ix. 841. 
mirrour, P.L. iv. 263, vii. 377 J 

5. ^. 164. 
mirth, P. X. i. 786, iv. 346, ix. 

1009; S.A. 1613 ; UAL 13, 

38, 152; IlPenf. 81; Cow. 

202, 955; Son. xxi.6; Oc?. 

Pa^: 1 ; Od. May-M. 6. 
miry, Pf. lxxxi. 23. 
mifbecoming, Com. 372. 
miscellaneous, P.P. iii. 50. 
mi fch an ce, Od. D. F. I. 44 ; 

Ep. M. Win. 27. 
mifchief, P. L. ii. 141, vi. 488, 

503, 636, ix. 472, 633, x. 

167, 895, xi. 450; P.R. iv. 

440; S.A. 1039; Cow. 591 5 

P/. vii. 57. 
mitchievous, P.L. ii. 1054. 
mif-created, P. L. ii. 683. 
mifdeed, S. A. 7*7. 
mif-deeds, P. L. x. 1080. 
mtf-deem, P. L. ix. 301 ; P. P. 

i. 424. 
mifdoing, P. P. i. 225. 
mifdone, S.A. 91 1. 



miferable, P. X. L 157, ii. 98* 

752, iv. 73, 126, ix. 1139, x. 

720, 839, 981, xi. 500; P. ii. 

i. 411, 471 ; S.A. 101, 340, 

4S0, 703, 762 ; Pf. v. 27. 

more miferable, P.L. x.930. 
miferies, P. L. x. 715 ; 3. A* 

64, 107, 651. 
mifer's, Com. 399. 
mifery, P. L. i. 90, 142, ii. 459, 

563, iv. 92, vi. 268, 462, 904, 

ix. 12, x. 726, S10, 928, 982, 

997, 1021, xi. 476 ; P. R. i. 

341,398,470; S.A. 1469; 

Pf. cxxxvi. 79* 
misfortune, Com. 286. 
misfortunes, P. L. x. 900. 
mifgave, P. L. ix. 846. 
mifguided, S.A. 912. 
mifhap, P. L. x. 239 ; Lye. 92* 
mif-inform, P. L. ix. 355. 
mif joining, P. L. v. 111. 
miflead, P. P. iv. 309. ' 
mifleads, P. L. ix. 640. 
miHed, P. P. i. 226; Cow.2O0 o 
mifliked, Pf. lxxxi. 48. 
mifreprefent, S.A. 124. 
mif-rule, P. L. vii. 271, x. 628. 
mifs, P. L. iii. 735, x. 104, 262 ; 

S. A. 917 ; Com. 925. 
mifs'd, P. L. vi. 499, ix. 857, 

xi. 15; P. P. ii. 486; Pf 

lxxxv. 41. 
miffing, P. P. ii. 9, 15, 77, iv. 

208; IlPenf. 6b. 
million, P. P. ii. 114. 
miffive, P. L. vi. 519. 
mill, P. L. iii. 53, v. 435, vii. 

333, ix.75, 158, ISO, x.694, 

xii. 629; Lye. 126. 
miftake, P. L. x. 903. 
mifthought, P. _L. ix. 289. 
miftook, Arc. 4 ; Cow. 815. 
miftrefs, P. L. ix. 532 ; Arc. 

36, 106. 
miitruft, P. X. ix. 357, 1124. 
miftruftful, P. L. ii. 126. 
mills, P. i. v. 185 ; Com. 337. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



mifty, P. L. i. 595 ; Vac. Ex. 41. 
mi fuied, Com. 47. 
miter'd, Lye. 112. 
mitigate, P. L. i. 556*, x. 70, 

xi. 41. 
mix, P. L. v. 1S2, 334, vii. 58, 

215, viii. 6l6", 627, 629, xi. 

529 ; Com. 594: 
mix'd, P. L. i. 58, 579, "• 09, 

913, iii. 456, 610, iv. 149, 

768, vi. 21, viii. 236, 602, ix. 

165, 577, x. 24, xi. 24, 662, 

686, xii. 181, 182; S. A. 

1031; Com. 526, 674; Od. 

Sol. Muf. 3. 
mixing, P. L. x. 228. 
mixture, P. L. xi. 51 ; IlPenf. 

26 ; Com. 244. 
Moab, P/. lxxxiii. 23. 
JNIoab's, P. L. i. 406. 
moan, Od. Nat. 191 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 55. ' 
moans, Son. xviii. S. 
moaping, P. L. xi. 485. 
mock, P.L. iv. 628; P. ft. ii. 

56. 
mock'd, P. L. x. 774, xii. 59. 
mode, P. It. i. 474 ; ii. 340. 
model, P.L. iii. 509, viii. 79. 
moderate, P. L. xii. 351 ; Cow?. 

769. 
moderation, P.L. xi. 363. 
modern, P. L. xL 386 ; S. A. 

6*53 ; Com. 45. 
modeft, P.I. iv. 310; S. A. 

1036. 
modefty, P. ft. iii. 241. 
Modin, P. ft. iii. 170. 
.Mogul, P. L. xi. 391 ; 
raoift, P. /,. ii. 898, iii. 652, v. 

325, 422, vii. 408, x. IO66, 

xi. 741 ; Lye. 159 i Cow. 825. 
moifturc, P. I. vii. 282, viii. 

25$ 
mold. Sec mould, 
mole, P. I. x. 300 ; Vac. Ex. 

95. 



molcft, P. JS. viii. 186; P. ft, 

iv. 498; S.A. 1525. 
Moloch, P. L. i. 392, 417, ii. 

43, vi. 357; Oo\ Nat. 205. 
molten, Cow. 931. 
Moly, Com. 636. 
Mom baza, P. L. xi. 399. 
moment, P.L. ii. 448, 907, vi. 

239, 509, vii. 154, x. 45 5 

P. R. iv. 162. 

in a moment, P. L. i. 544, 

ii. 6"09, iv. 51; S.^.1559; 
Pf. vi. 24. 
Mona, Lye. 54. 
monarch, P. L. i. 638, ii. 467, 

iv. 96O, v. 832, x. 375 ; Com, 

957. 
monarchal, P. L. ii. 428. 
monarchies, P.L. ii. 307; P.P. 

iii. 246, iv. 150. 
moharchs, P. L. i. 599 ; P.P. 

iii. 262; *SWj. xv. 3. 
monarchy, P. L. i. 42, v. 79*5, 

x.379; P. ii. i. 87, iii. 277. 
money, P. Ii. ii. 422. 
'mongft, L'AL 4; Od. D. F. I. 

14. 
monfter, P. L. ii. 675, x. 590, 

986 ; P. R. iv. 100, 12S ; 

S.A. 230. 
monfters, P. L. ii. 795, x. 523 ; 

Com. 695. 
monurous, P.L. i. 197,479, '*• 

625, iii. 456, vi. 86*2, x. 514, 

xi. 474 ; Lye. 158 ; Com. 533, 

605. 
Montalban, P. I. i. 583. 
Montczume, P. L. xi. 407. 
month, Od. Nat. 1. 
monthly, P. 7,. iii. 728. 
months, P.L. iii. 581, viii. 69; 

Com. 1 14. 
monument, P. I. x. 258, xi.. 

32b; S. /J. 570, 1734; Ep. 

JV.Sh. 8. 
monumental. 7/ Vcnf. 135. 
monuments, P. i,. i. 6y5. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



mood, P. L. i. 550, vi. 620, ix. 
920 ; P. R. iv, 450 ; S. A. 
662; Lye. 87; Com. 371; 
Son. xii. 9- 

moon, P. X. i. 287 , 440, 5^6, 
784, ii. 665, 1053, iii. 459, 
726, iv. 6o6, 648, 655, 798 t 
v.42, 175, 263, 41 S, 421, vii. 
104, 356, 375, viii. 142, x, 
656, xii. 266; 5.^. 87; // 
Pew/: 67 ; Cow. 1 16, 33 1 , 374, 
1017; Son. xii. 7, xxii. 5; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 29 ; P/. viii, 10, 
Ixxxi. 9, exxxvi. 53. 

mooned, P. X, iv. 978 ; Od. Nat. 
200. 

moon-Wd, Od. Nat. 236. 

moon-ftruck, P. L. xi. 486* 

moon's, P. JL iv. 273. 

moons, P. jL. viii. 149. 

moorilh, Com. 433. 

moors, (verb) P. jL. i. 207. 

moory, P. L. ii. 944. 

moral, P. L. xii. 298; P, R. iv. 
263, 351 ; Coin. 807. 

more, P. L. i. 1 1, 54, 270, 522, 
575, 681, ii. 35, 37, 162, 
225, 273, 350, 474, 521, 69S, 
790, 835, 916, 1017, iii. 26, 
200, 309, 312,698, iv. 112, 
127, 207, 369, 400, 566, 629, 
702, 853, 958, 969, 1014, v. 
71, 72, 73, 152, 296, 302, 
351, 475, 505, 555, 576, 682, 
805, vi. 129, 421, 612, 791, 
vii. 96\ 97>6l5, 6l6, viii. 94, 
194, 537, 571, 57 3 i 57% 57 6 1 
ix. 1, 14, 100, 119, 120,146, 
147, 177,207,264,372,384, 
398, 444, 453, 469, 483, 521, 
580, 614, 623, 822, 1006, 
1059, 1090, 1170, x. 16*9, 
486, 510, 669, 69O, 886, 8Q6, 
xi. 71, 199, 205, 473, 599, 
805, xii. 389, 418, 477; 
P. R. i. 77, 221, 326, 340, 
359, 431, 433, 439, 473, ii. 
156, 206, 226, 259, 353, 467, 



476, iii. 40, 77, 96, 207, 
345, iv. 14,55,71,112,158, 
179, 181 ; S. A. 101, 106, 
1 14, 207, 270, 305, 388, 510, 
736, 757, 842, 960, II69, 
1287)1299,1330,1467,1592, 
1677 ;L' A 1. 15; IlPtnf. 120; 
Arc. 40; Com. 57, 297, 636 9 
789, 806, 994,; Son. vii. 8, 9, 
x. 4, xxiii. 12; Od. Nat. 
177; Od, PaJT.20; Od. Cir. 
15, 16, 28 ; Ep. M. Win. 6 ; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 26 ; Sen. 2 ; Pf. 
iv. 31, lxxxiv. 34, lxxxvii. 5. 
no more, P. L. ii. 146, iii. 
264, 340, iv. 22, 327, 6^37, 



775, 838, 1008, 



6'59, 



751, 882, vi. 349, vii. 144, 
viii. 452, 630, ix. 827, x. 
779, 95S, 1041, xi. 200, 
312, 745, 850; P. R. i. 
419, 455, 457, iv. 210; 
5.^.591,677,935; Lye. 
43, 131, 182; Com. 594, 
806 ; Od. Nat. 82 ; Od. on 
Time, 5 ; Pf. ii. 7, lxxxviii. 
21. 
not more, P. R. i. 496, iv. 

536. 

once more, S. A. 742 ; Lye. 

1 ; Son. xxiii. 7. See once. 

Moreh, P. L. xii. 137. 

morn, P. L. i. 208, 742, iii. 42, 

iv. 641, 650, 773, v. 1, 30, 

168, 202, 310, 428, 628, 7 16, 

vi. 2, 524, 748, vii. 29, 252, 

260, 338, 386, 448, 550, viii. 

£11, ix. 191,447,848,1136, 

xi. 173, 184, xii. 422; P. R. 

ii. 268, iv. 439; Lye. 26, 

1 87; HAL 107 ; II Pen/. 112; 

Arc. 56; Com. 139, 753; Od. 

Nat. 1 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 2S ; 

Ep. M. Win. 4,3; Pf. lxxxviii. 

56. 

morning, P. L. iv. 244, 623, v. 

20, 124, 145, 746, vii. 108, 

275, 366, ix. 194, 800; P. iv. 



VOL. I- 



VERBAL INDEX, 



ir. 221, 426, 451 ; S. A. 

1598; I#c 171 ; Com. 622, 

920; Od.Nat.72, HP; P/. 

v. 6, 7. 
morning-hour, P. L. viii. 111. 
morning-light, P. L. xi. 204. 
morning-ftar, P. Z-. v. 708 ; 

P. 11. i. 294; 0(1 May-M. I. 
morning-watch, P. L. xii. 207. 
morning's, P. L. v. 211. 
Morpheus, 17 Pew/1 10. 
morrice, Com. Il6. 
morrow, P. L. iv. 588, 623, 662. 

to-morrow, Lye. 193. 
morrow's, P. L. v. 33. 
morfel, P. L. ii. 80S. 
morfels, P. L. x. 605. 
mortal, P. L. i. 2, 51, 559, 5cS8, 

693, 766, ii, 653, 729, 813, 

iii. 55, 179, 214, 215, 253, 

568, iv. 8, vi. 348, 434, vii. 

24, viii. 331, ix. 1003, X.48, 

H3, 79b> xi. 54, 273, 366, 

xii. 9, ^36, 248, 384; P. R. 

i. 86, 234, iv. 318; S. A. 

34,9,639, 1102, 1175, 1439, 

1682; Lye. 78; Arc. 62; 

Cow. 10, 244, 686, 802 ; Orf. 

Nat. 14,95; Od.D. F. I.-il ; 

Od. on Time, 6; iyi Ixxxv. 

48, exxxvi. 94. 
mortality, P. L. x. 7/6; Od.D. 

F. I. 35. 
mortals, P. L. ii. 1032 ; P. P. 

iv. 454; S. A. 523, 817; U 

Pen/. 153; Com. 997, 1013; 

Vac. Ex. 66. 
mortification, »S'. A. 622. 
Mofaick, P. L. iv. 700. 
Mofcow, P. L. xi. 395. 
Moles, i>. L. xii. 170, 198, 

211, 237, 241, 307; F. H. i. 

352, ii. 15. 
Moles', P.P. iv. 219, 225. 
mofly, P. L. v. 392, ix. 589 5 

P. R. ii. 184; It Pay: 175; 

Cow. '276. 
moft, P. £. i. 187, ii. 12?, 124. 



340, v. 412, 489, 624, vi, 
126, 166,500, 573, 791, viii. 
196, 542, 564, ix. 215,454, 
949, 1093, x. 78, 599, 901, 
979, 1095, xi.315, 699, xii. 
354; P.R. i. 404,440,482, 
iii. 307, iv. 465; S. A. 67, 
190, 446,972, 1001, 1052, 
1704 ; II Pen/. 62 ; Arc. 76 ; 
Com. 67, 326, 363, 385, 380, 
564,591,592,762; Od.Pa/j: 
13; Ep. Hobf. II. 1; P/: 
vii. 29, lxxxvi. 37, 53, 56, 
lxxxvii. 9. 

motes, II Penf. S. 

mother, P. L. i. 36, 687, ii. 
792, 849, iv. 475, 492, v. 
338, 388, vii. 281, viii. 4-98, 
ix. 644, 6S0, x. 602, xi. 159, 
160, xii. 36S, 379, 621; 
P. R. i. 86, 227, ii. 60, iv. 
240, 566 ; Arc. 22 ; Cow. 57, 
63, 153, 253 ; Son. xviii. 8 ; 
Od. Nat. 3,201; Od.D.F.F 
71. 

motherly, P. R. ii. 64. 

mother-tree, P. L. ix. 1106. 

mother's, P. L. x. 778, xi. 536; 
P.P. ii. 136, iii. 154, iv. 
216,639; Com. 523; .fy.il/. 
Wiu. 33. 

motion, P. X. ii. 75, 151, 780, 
v. 581, vi. 192, 302, 532, 
vii. 177, viii. 35, 115, 223, 
259, is. 674, xii. 592; P. II 
i. 290. iv. 601 ; Arc. 71 ; Orf. 
Sol. Muf. 22; Fp.IJobj.U. 
7,8. 

motion'd, P. L. ix. 229 ; S. A. 
222. 

motionlcfs, Com. 81 9. 

motions, P. £. ii. 191, iii. 582, 
v. 625, vii. 500, viii. 130, x. 
65S, xi. 91 ; S. A. 1382. 

move, P. /,. i. 519, ii. 837, iii. 
27, 579, 71.9, v. 177, 554. 
701, vi. 6S, 556, 790, viii. 
S3, 70, 77. J 30, 276, 281, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



585, ix. 1016, x. 297, 652, 
xi. 91 ; P.R. iii. 171, 224; 
S.A.752; Lye. ISO; Com. 
116; Son. xvii. 8 ; Od. Nat. 
129; Vac. Ex.2; Ep. Hobf. 
II. 2. 

mov'd, P. L. i. 29, 56l, ii. 876, 
1022, iv. 902, vi. 63, 302, 
405, vii. 91, viii. Il6", 132, 
264, 293, ix. 6"6Y, 1143, xi. 
453,56'0, 830; P.R. i. 170, 
424, ii. 407 ; S. A. 895, 1452 ; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 9; Pf lxxxii. 
19. 

moves, P. L. vii. 534, x. 359 ; 
P.R. iii. 200; S. A. 726; 
Com. 247. 

moving, P. L. i. 284, ii. 675, 
iv. 409, v. 310, vi. 533, vii. 
87, 207, 415, ix. 677; S. A. 
102. 

mould, P.L. i. 706, ii. 139, 355, 
iii. 709, iv. 226, 360, v. 321, 
vi. 473, 576, vii. 356, 470, 
ix. 485 ; Arc. 73 ; Com. YJ ; 
Od. Nat. 138; Pf vii. 53. 

mould, (verb) P. L. x. 744. 

moulds, P. L. xi. 571. 

mound, P.L. iv. 134, 226. 

mount, P. X. i. 15, 781, ii. 
593, iii. 530, iv. 126, 281, 
569 f v. 382, 598, 643, 712, 
757, 758, 764, vi. 5, 88, 743, 
vii. 584, 600, xi. 216, 320, 
402, 829, xii. 142, 144, 227; 
P. ii. i. 351, ii. 15, iv. 50, 
236, 547; S. A. 988; Lye. 
161 ; Arc. 55 ;0d. Nat. 158; 
Pf. iii. 12, 

mountain, P. L. i. 443, 6l3, iv. 
226. v. 766, vi. 197, 575, 
viii. 303, x. 1065, xi. 567, 
728, 851; P. R. iii. 252, 
253, 265 ; iv. 26 ; Com. &9 ; 
Ariqfl. 1. 

mountaineer, Com. 426. 

mountain-nymph, L'Al. 36. 

saountain-pard, Com. 444. 



mountain-tops, P. L. ii. 488. 

mountains, P. L. i. 291, vi. 
649, 652, 697, 842, vii. 201, 
214, 285, x. 291 ; P. R. iv. 
39 ; S. A. 1648 ; L'AL 73, 
Son. xviii. 2 ; 0</. JVc/. 181 ; 
Od. Paf 51; Pf. lxxxiii. 56 , 
lxxxvii. 1, cxiv. 11, 13. 

mounted, P. L. iv. 1014, v. 
300, vi. 572, x. 589; Lye. 
172. 

mounting, Od. D. F. I. 15. 

mourn, Lye. 41 ; Od. Nat. 188; 
204; Od.Cir. 6; Pf. lxxxviii. 
28. 

mourn'd, P. L. i. 458. 

mourners, Od. Paf}\ 56. 

mourneth, Com. 235. 

mournful, P. L. i. 244; Od. 
Puff. 28. 

mourning, S. A. 1712. 

mourns, P. L. xi. 76O ; P. R. 
iii. 279; S. A. 1752. 

mouth, P. L. ii. 888, v. 83, ix. 
187, 514, x. 288, 636, xi. 
569, xii. 42 ; P. R. i. 350. 
482, iii. 12, iv. 276; S. A. 
1522; Son. xv. 2; Pf. v. 25. 

mouths, P. X. ii. 517, 655 9 
967, iv. 513, vi. 576, x. 547, 
xii. 15S;P. H.i. 428; S.A. 
452, 866; L3/C 119; Son.xu 
10; P/. viii. 4, 5. 

mower, UAL 66. 

mows down, P. L. x. 6p6. 

Mozambick, P. L. iv. l6l. 

much, P. L. i. 119, ii. 119, 
210, 562, iv. 31, 451, vii. 9% 
ix. 46, 123, 202, 247, 382, 
404, 444, 551, 55$, 991, 
1022, 1158, x. 20, 712, xi. 
235,415,448,548,666,791, 
xii. 8, 274; P. K.i. 107, 185, 
279, 341, 378, 386, ii. 173, 
iii. 387, iv. 229, 313; S. A. 
813, 828, 1006, 1016, 1082, 
1442, 1445; Com. 57; Ep. 
M. Win. 67;Pf vi.3, 22, 



m 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

as much r P. X. iv. 833. murky, P. X. x. 280. 

how much, P. X. ii. 480. murmuring, P. 7>. iv. 260, 453?, 

much-humbled, P. X. xi. 181. 1015, viii. 263; P. ii. iii 

much lefs, P. X. iii. 220, v. 108; II Pen/. 144. 

799, vi 4.Q5, viii. 395, 407, murmur, 1\ X. ii. 284, v. 873, 

ix. 346, 533. vii. 68 ; P. Ii. iv. 248 ; Son- 

much more, P. X. ii. 22, iii. xix. 9. 

402, 405, 553, v. 8, ix. 925, murmur'd, Com. 259. 

x. 221, 501, 1024, xii. 476', murmurs, P. X. v. 1 96 ; Arc 

6*04; P. P. i. 45, ii. 100, 60 ; Com. 526'. 

303, iv. 284, 310; 6'. A. murren, P. X. xiL 179. 

1709. M ufa) us, II Pen/. 104. 

how much more, P. X. vi. mufe, P. X. i. 6, 376, iii. 19, 

223, x. 1060, xi. 814. vii. 37, 52; Lye. 19, 58, 59, 

not much, P. X. x. 219- 66, 133 ; Com. 515 ; Son. L 

fo much, P. X. i. 92, ii. 2$3, 33-; Of/. JW. 15 ; Od. Pajj. 

454, 1008,. iii. 54, iv. 447, 4 ; Vac. Ex. 53. 

viii. 600, ix. 487, x. 622, mufe,. (verb) Pf. ii. 2. 

1008; P. P. iii. 133, iv. 5; muf d, P. L. ix. 744 ; P. P. ii. 

6'.^f. 936, 1031. 99. 

too much, P. L. v. 783, viii. mufes, P. X. iii. 27, vii. 6; 

538, xi. 531 ; Ep. W. Sk. 11 Pert/. 47 ; Son. viii. 9- 

14; Ep.Hobf. II. 12. mufick, P. X.i. 787, v. 548, xi. 

mud, Caw. 931. 592 ; P. P. iv. 332 ; II Pen/. 

Mulciber, P. L. i. 740. 151 ; Arc. 68, 74; Sow. xiii.- 

mules, P.P. iii. 335. 2; 0</. i\ 7 <tf. 93, 117, Od. 

multiform, P. L. v. 182. JM 1 ; Od. Cir. 2 ;. Od. Sol. 

multiplied, P. X. vii. 39«, viii. Jlf w / 21. 

424; P. P. iv. 41. mufical, 11 Pcnf. 62; Cow 

multiplies, P. X. v. 318; P. P. 478. 

i. 69. muling, P. 7i. i. 185, iv. 249 ; 

multiply, P. X. vii. 396, 531, S. A. 1017; II Pcnf. 38; 

630, x. 193, 730, 732, xi. Com. 3S6. 

677, xii. 17. mufk-rofe, Lye. 146; Com. 496.. 

multitude, P. X. i. 351, 702, mufky, Com. 989. 

730, ii. 323, 836, iii. 260, mult, P. X. v. 345, 533, x. 

345, vi. 810, S47, vii. 138, x. 213, 250, 363, 985, xi. 269, 

554, 643, xii. 352 ; P. P i. 538, 541, 550, 627, xii. 95, 

]|X>\ ii. 420, iii. 331 ; S. A. 175, 176, 177, 179, 1$°, 1$2,. 

696. 186 r 187, 190, 203, 331, 

multitudes, P. X. iv. 471, v. 480; P. P.. i. 59, 91, 96, 

716, vi. 31, x. 26; P. R. ii. 263, 476, ii. 225, iii. 363 r 

470. iv. 16, 222, 22^, 476 r 540;. 

mummers, S. A. 1325. S. A. 32, 50, 468, 479, &40 r 

mural, P. X. vi. 879- 868, 902, 945, 12y6;. Lye. 

murder, S.A. li%6. 12, 38 j CW/. 82,. 159,. 6'i2 r 

murderer, S. A. 832, 1180. 686, 745,786, 805,80^; 0d T 

murderous, P. P. ii. 76. Aat. 153 r 156 ; Od Pafj. 8 ^ 



VERBAL INDEX. 

Vac. Esc, 55 « Fore, of Con. nailed, P. X. xii. 413. 

11. nails, P. X. xii. 415. 

mull needs, P. X. ii, 277, v, naked, P. X. iv. 290, 319, 496, 

556", xii. 10. 713, 772, v. 382, 444,; ix. 

fliufter, P. R. hi. 308, 1057,1074,1115,1117,1139, 

muttering, P. X. ii. 268, xi. x. 117, 212; 0d.Nat.4>0; 

645 ; & A 402 ; Vac. Ex. 44. Vac. Ex. 23. 

mutable, P. X. v. 237; & ^. nakednefs, P. X. x. 217, 221; 

793, 1407. 0d. Cir. 20. 

mute, P. X. i. 6l8, ii. 420, iii. Namancos, Lye, 162. 

217, vii. 25, viii. 222, ix. 557 ', name, P. X. i. 412, 462, 738, ii. 

563, 672, 748, 106'4, x. 18, 788,96*4, iii. 412, iv.36,950, 

xi. 31, 194; P. R. i, 12, 951, v. 658, 707, 776, vi. 174, 

459, iii- 2; S. A. 248, 672; vii. 1, 5, 536, viii. 114, 357, 

Lye. 32 ; II Pen/. 55, 496, ix. 40, 142, x. 386, 649, 

mutely, Vac. Ex. 6. 86*7, xi. 171, xii. 36, 45, 311, 

mutiny, P. L. ii. 926. 577, 584; P. R. ii. 346; 

muttering, P. X. ix. 1002, 5. A. 331, 475, 894, 975, 

mutters, Com. 817- 1101, 1429 ; Com. 738, 749, 

mutual, P. X. i. 87, iv. 376, 826, 868 ; Son. viii. 7, xv. 1 ; 

727, 728, vi, 506, vii. 429, Od. D. F. I. 77 ; Ep.M. Win. 

viii. 58, 385, ix. 1043, 1187 ; 60 ; Vac. Ex. 99 ; Ep. W. S/u 

Com. 741 ; Ep, Hobf. 31. 6 ; Pf. v. 36, vii. 63, viii. 2, 

myriads, P. X. i. 87, 622, v. 24, lxxx. 76, lxxxiii. 15, 65, 

684, vi. 24, vii. 201. lxxxvi. 32, 39, lxxxviii. 16, 

myrrh, P. L. v. 23, 292, ix. exxxvi. 5. 

'629, xii. 363 ; P. R. i, 251 ; name, (verb) P. L. i. 197, viii. 

Com, 937- 2/2, ix. 44, xii. 326. 

inyrrhine, P. P. iv. 119. without name, S. A. 677. 

myrtle, P. L. iv. 262, 694, ix, nam'd, P. L. i. 80, 574, ii. 579, 

219 J Od. ■"#"#. 51. v. 839, vi. 294, vii. 252, 274, 

myrtle-band, P. X. ix. 431. vi'i. 352,439, xi.296,xii.62; 

myrtles, P. X. ix, 627 ; Lye. 2. P. R. ii. 8 ; £. ,4. 982 ; Com. 

myfteries, P. X, xii. 509. 58,-325. 

myfterious, P. L. iv. 312, 743, nameleis, P. L. vi. 380. 

750, viii. 599^ x. 173; names, P. L. i. 36l, 365, 374, 

UPcnf. 147; Cow?. 130. 376, 421, vi, 76, 373, vii. 

myfrerioufly, P. X. iii. 51 6. 493, viii. 344, xi. 277, xii. 

myitery, S. A. 3/8 ; Com. 785. 140, 458, 515 ; P. K. ii. 1S.9, 

myflick, P. X. y. 178, ix. 442. 447, iv. 3l6; S. A. 974; 

myitical, P. X. v. 6*20. Com. 208, 627; &w. xi. 10. 

naming, P. X. viii. 359, ix, 
751. 

N. Naptha, P. X. i. 729- 
Narciffus, Com. 237. 

Naiades, P.P. ii. 355; Com* nard, P. X. v. 293; Cow?. 991. 

1254. narrow, P. X. i. 779, ii- 9h), 

nail'd, 5. A. £90. iv, 207, 384, 528, vi. 104, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



583, ix. 83, 3*23, xi. 341; 
S.A. 1117. 

narrower, P. L. vii. 21 ; P. R. 
iv. 515. 

nathlefs, P. L. i. 299. 

nation, P. L. xii. 1 1 1 , 1 13, 1 24, 
164,414, 503, iv. 362; 5.^. 
218, 857, 877, 1182, 1205, 
1424, 1494 ; Com. 33 ; P/. vii. 
25, lxxxiii. 14. 

national, P. L. xii. 317; S. A. 
312. 

nations, P. L. i. 385, 598, iv. 
663,xi. 692,792, xii. 97,126', 
147, 277, 329, 440, 446, 450, 
499;P.-R. i. 79, 98,442, ii. 
473, iii. 12, 76, US, iv. 47, 
80,122, 135, 202; S.A. 268, 
565,890; Brut. 14; P/. ii.l, 
lxxx\ 32, lxxxii. 28, lxxxvi. 
29, lxxxvii. 23. 

native, P. L. i. 458,634, ii. 76, 
1050, iii. 605, iv. 158, 289, 
v. 36l, 863, vi. 226, 436, vii. 
16, 245, ix. 93, 373, 1056, x. 
467, 1085, xi. 2/0, 292, 463, 
xii. 54, 129; P. & i. 378, 
ji.31.3, iii- 437, iv. 241,333; 
Com. 76 ; Vac. Ex. 1. 

natiyos, P. L. v. 790. 

nativity, P. I. vi. 482 ; P. R. 
i. 242; S.A. 1141. 

natural, P. L. x. 740, 765, xii. 
288, 645 ; Vac. Ex. 87. 

nature, P. L. ii. 218, 624, 895, 
911,1037, iii. 126, 282,304, 
jv. 242, 633, 667, v. 24, 109, 
294, 318, 360, 452, 509, 527, 

s:'A, vi. 176, 267,442, 511, 

vii. 103, 482, viii. 26, 153, 
353,459,506,534,541,561., 
jx. 27, 624, 782, 914, 956, 
1001, n. 169, 885, 892, xi. 
49,182, 194, 597,602,604, 
xii. 29; P.ii. ii- 230, 249, 
250, 253, 295, 332, iii. 230, 
iv.352; S. /*. 595, 8<)0, 1515; 
Ij/c. 60; Arc. 70 ; Com, 198, 



411, 559,680,710,762; (V. 

Nat. 32, 101 ; Ep. M. Win. 

13; Vac. Ex. 47. 
nature's, P. L. iii. 49, 455, iv. 

207, 314, v. 45, 181, vi.311, 

x. 805, xi. 523, xii. 578; 

P. R. i. 13, ii. 265, 295, iv. 

228 ; Com. 727, 739, 745, 

772 ; Od. D. F. I. 45 ; Od. 

Sol. Mvf. 20. 
natures, P. L. v. 302, vii. 493. 
navel, Com. 520. 
nay, P. L. iv. 71, ix. 1159; 

P.R. iv.6; S.A. 350, 1729; 

Com. 659; Pp. Flobf. II. 17. 
Nazareth, P. ft. i. 23, ii. 79- 
Nazarite, S. A. 1359, 1386. 
Neasra's, Lye. 69. 
near, P. L. ii. 60fl, iv. 425, 787, 

x. 347, 562 ; S. A. 725 ; Com. 

146, 56*7; Od. D.F.I. 10; 

P/! vii. 48. 
near at hand, UAL 63. 
near urtiering, Com. 2.79. 

more near, P. L. v. 830; Arc. 
40 ; Od. O. 28. 

fo near, P. L. vii. 55, ix. 220, 
221, x. 389; & -rf. 786; 
Cow. 6l6 ; So?i. vii. 6; 0</, 
Nat. 44; iy. Ixxxiv. 4. 

too near, Com. 49 1. 
nearer, P. X. i. 785, ii. 394, 

iOOS, iv. 133, 399* v. 35$, 

476, vi. 81, vii. 62, ix. 434, 

578; P. R. i. 400, iv. 514; 

S.A.7'23, 1229, 1631. 
neareft, P. L. i. 192, ii. 958, 

iii. 649, iv. 484, v. 622 ; Com. 

90 ; Son. xx i. 10. 
nearly, P. L. v. 721. 
neat, Sou. xx. 9- 
neat-handed, L'/tf/. 86. 
neatnefs, Od. Hor. 5. 
Nebaioth, P. R. ii. 309. 
Nebo, P. L. i. 407. 
necellary, 5. A. 90. 
neceflitate, P. //. x. 44. 
necefikuted, P. L, v. 530, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



aeeeffity, P.X. iii. 110, iv. 313, 

v. 528, vii. 172, x. 131,7^5; 

S.A. 1656; Arc. 69. 
neck, P. X. vii. 438, ix. 501, 

525 ; Son. xvi. 5. 
necks, P. X. iii. 395, v. 787, x. 

1046; P.P. iv. 418. 
necromancer's, Com. 649» 
neclar, P. X. iv. 240, v, 428, 

633, ix. 838; Lye. 175; 

K«c. Ex. 39. 
ne&ar'd, Cow. 479, 838; Od. 

X>. P. J. 49. 
nedarine, P. X. iv. 332. 
ne&arous, P. X. v. 306, vi. 332. 
need, (fubft.) P. X. v. 629, viii. 

419, ix. 260, 311, 731; P. P. 

ii. 253, 254, 318, 397; S. A 

1107, 1437, 1483 ; Com. 219, 

287, 857; Vac. Ex. 81; Pf. 

lxxx.2,lxxxvi.4, exxxvi. 86. 
need, P. X. ii. 53, 341, 413, iii. 

340,iv.4J9,6l7,vi.625, viii. 

628, ix. 236, 246, x, 80, 409, 

1082; P.P. ii. 249, iii. 385, 

399; S.A. 1526; Lye. 122; 

Co?n. 362, 394 ; Od. Nat. 82. 
needed, P. X. v. 151, 214, 384, 

vii. 378. 
needing, P.P. ii. 251. 
needlefs, P. X. vii. 494, ix. 1 140 ; 

P. R. ii. 484 ; Com. 942. 
needs, P. L. iv. 235, v* 302, 

414, vii. 126, viii. 136, ix. 

215, xi. 251 ; P. R. iv. 290, 

325; S.A. 1345, 1554; Ep. 

W. Sh. 1. 
needs muft, P. X. iii. 105, iv. 

412, vi. 456, 693, ix. 307, 

942, xii. 383 ; S. A. 840, 

1044, 1519. See muft. 
necd'ft, P. L. viii. 564 ; S. A. 

1379; Vac. Ex. 11; £». JT. 

SA. 6. 
ne'er, S. A. 212 ; Com. 127, 

131, 777; Sow. xvii.2; Ep. 

Hobf. II. 18; P/. lxxxvii. 

22. 



negleft, P. X. iii. 199, xii. 426; 

Com. 510; Vac, Ex. 16. 
negle&ed, S. ^.431, 944 ; Com. 

743. 
neglc&s, P. X. iii. 738. 
Negus, P. X. xi. 397, 
neighbour, Cow. 484, 576 ; P/. 

lxxx. 26. 
neighbourhood, P. X. i. 400 ; 

Com. 3U;0d. Paf. 52 ; Hor. 

1.5, 
neighbouring, P. X. ii. 395, iii. 

459, 726, iv. 145, v. 547, vi. 

663, xi. 575, xii. 136; P. P. 

iii. 76, 319; X'^i/. 80. 
neighbours, S. A. 180. 
neither, P. X. ii. 482, 811,912, 

939, iii. 682, iv. 509, 650, 

1007, v. 146, vi. 322, viii. 

596, ix. 124, II61, 1188, x. 

791, xi. 773 \ P.R. iii. 44; 

Lye. 52 ; -S'o/z.xx. 8 ; EuripA. 
Nepenthes, Com. 675. 
Neptune, P. R. ii. 19O; Com. 

18; Vac. Ex. 43. 
Neptune's, P. X. ix. 18 ; Lye. 

90 ; (Cow. 869. 
Nereus'. Com. 835, 871. 
nerve, P. X. xi. 415 ; <S. A. 

639- 
nerves, S. A. 1646 ; Com. 660, 

797 ; Son. xvii. 8. 
neft, Pf. Ixxxiv. 12. 
nefts, P. X. iv. 601 ; P. R. 

501 ; S. ^. 1694. 
net, P. X. xi. 586. 
nets, P. II. ii. 162. 
nether, P. X. i. 346, ii. 296 

784, iv. 145, 231, vii. 6'24, 

xi. 32 S; Com. 20. 
nethermoil, P. X. ii. 956, 969. 
never, P. X. i. 66, 108, 110, 

159, 352, 657, ii. 154, 721, 

iii. 4, 199,233,360,414,590, 

iv. 98, 707, v. 31, 35, 121, 

550, vi. 209, ix. 400, 597, 

788, 913, 916, 976, 02';, 

J090, 1153, x. 804, S99, xr. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



176,274, 425, 892, xii. 418; 
P.R. i.389, iii. 185,354, iv. 
14, 171,376, 488; S. A. 7$, 
228, 239, 297 ', 306, 315, 641, 
950,964. 1085, 1129, H87, 
1376, 1438; IlPtnf 137, 
155 ; Com. 44, 266, 589, 601, 
925, 929, 978 j Son. xiv. 1 ; 
Od.Nat.95y 118; Vac. Ex. 
86 ; Ep. Hobf. I. 9, II. 2, 3, 
5 ; Pf lxxxiii. 64, 

never-ceafing, P. L. ii. 654. 

never-ending, P. L. ii. 221. 

never more, P. X. ix. 859 ; 
P.R. i. 405, 420, iv. 619; 
Com. 559; P/. lxxxv. 34, 
lxxxviii. 22. 

never-fere, Lye. 2. 

never ftnee, P. X. i. 573, ix. 
504. 

neverthelefs, P. L. x. 970. 

new, P.L. i. 252, 2?9, 290, 
365, 645,650, ii. 239, 319, 
348, 403, 837, 867, iii. 89, 
137, 294, 468, 613, 661, 679, 
iv. 34, 106, 113, 184, 205, 
287, 391, 410, 575, v. 19, 
1 84, 43 1 , 679, 680, 6S 1 , 69 1 , 
780, 855, vi.451, 571,vii.68, 
209, viii. 311, ix. 17o, 222, 
667 t 843, 985, 1008, x. 243, 
257,348,377,406,647,721, 
972, xi. 4, 103, 138, 228, 
867, 900, xii. 5, 549; P.R. 
j. 328, ii. 38,58, 120", iv. 278, 
443, 566 ; S.J. 1329, 1755 ; 
Lye. 103; Com. 472, 941, 
9(>7 ; Son. xi. 3, xv. 6", xvi. 
11 ; Od. Nat. 18,66; Ep. 31. 
Win. 71 ; Fore, of Con. 20 ; 
Pf. lxxxi. 9. 

new-arriv'd, P. L. x. 26. 

new-baptizfd, P. R. ii. 1. 

new-born, Od. Nat. 1 16. 

new-comer, P. X. ix. 1097. 

new-created, P. £. iv, 937, vii. 
554, x. 481. 

new-declar'd, P. R. i. 121. 



new-enlightened, Orf. JV r a/. 82, 

new-enliven'd, Cow. 228. 

new-entrufted, Co?n. 36. 

new-fangled, Vac. Ex. 19. 

new-felt, P. L. x. 263. 

newrgatherM, P. L. ix. 852. 

new-graven, P. P. i. 253. 

new-made, P. L. vii.6l7; P/ 
exxxvi. 26. 

newly, Ep. Hobf. I. 18. 

new-reap'd, P.L. xi. 431. 

new-risen, P. L. i. 594. 

new-fpangled, Lye. 170. 

new-wak'd, P. L. viii. 4, 253. 

news, P. L. vi. 20, x. 21, xi. 
263; S.J. 1538. 
ill-news, P.R. i. 64. 

next, P. L. i. 79, 238, 378,38.5. 
406, 446, 457, ii. 19, 43, 439, 
909, 965, iii. 239, 383, 466, 
iv. 220, 781, 86.4, 948, v. 33, 
102, 671, vi. 45, 316, 439 : . 
446, 653, vii, 489, viii. 449, 
ix. 174, 807, 950, x. 604. 
645, xi. 16*9, 436, xii. 332 ; 
P.R. iv.273, 295; Com. 185, 
501, 916; Ep. MrlVui. 62, 
67; Ftfc. &r. 41, 58. 

nice, P. L. iv. 241, v. 433, viii. 
399; P- ii. iv. 157; Cow. 
139- 

nicely, P. P. iv. 377* 

nicel't, P. J,, vi. 584. 

Niger, P. L. xi. 402. 

niggard, Co?//. 726. 

nigh, P.L. i. 700, ii. 940, iii. 
645, iv. 15, 366, 552, vi. 533, 
viii. 564, ix. 141, 433, 4.82, 
514, 595, x. 159, 632, 864, 
xi. 184, 193, xii. 625; P. H. 
j. 36, 332, ii. 20, 26'2^ iv. 489, 
582; S. J. 178, 1564; Sun, 
i. 10; Pf. lxxxviii. 12. See 
diew. 

nigheft, P. 11. i. 332. 
nigh hand, P. L. iii. 566. 
nigh at hand, P. L. ix. 256 ; 
K \\R. i. 20; S. A, 593, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



night, P. L. \. 50, 207, 343, 
487, 500, 503, 543, ii. 133, 
150, 286, 30S, 439, 505, 670, 
894,962, 1002, 1036, iii. 18, 
71,424,514,545,557,726, 
732, iv. 550, 557,611,613, 
633, 647, 654, 665, 674, 680, 
688, 724, 776, 1015, v. 30, 
31, 35, 93, 96, 128, 162, 166, 
206, 227, 261, 547, 642, 645, 
685,699,700,745, vi. 8, 14, 
406,416,521, 832, vii. 105, 
123, 251, 341, 351, 380, 584, 
viii. 24, 136, 139, ix. 52, 58, 
65, 140, 211, 635, x. 477, 
846, 1070, xi. 173, 826, 898, 
xii. 257 ; P. ft. i- 304, 500, 
ii. 263, 279, iv. 398, 406, 
426, 436,452, 4S1; S.A. 88, 
l6l, 404, 807; Lye. 29; 
HAL 42, 107; II Pen/. 58, 
121 ; Arc.6\ ; Com. 122, 123, 
195, 222,224, 250, 285, 335, 
347, 404, 580, 956; Son. ix. 
13, xxiii. 14; Od. Nat. 6l, 
111; Od.Paff. 7, 29; Od. 
Cir. 5; Ep.Hobf.L 15; Pf. 
i. 6. 

n*ght-by-night, Com, 532. 
ancient night, P. L. ii. 970, 

986. 
all night, P. L. vi. 1, vii. 436, 

xii. 206. 
all night long, P. L. iv. 603, 
657 ,v. 657; P/.lxxxviii.3. 
by night, P. L. vii. 348, viii. 
143, x. 342, xii. 203, 365 ; 
P. R. i. 244; Com. 432; 
Pf. exxxvi. 33. 
this night, Com. 948. 

night-founder'd, P. L. i. 204 ; 
Com. 483. 

night-hag, P. L. ii. 662. 

night-raven, LAI. 7« 

night-iieeds, Od. Nat. 236. 

night-wanderer, P. L. ix. 640. 

night-warbling, P. X. v.40 c 



night-watches, P. L. iv. 780. 
nightly, P. L. i. 440, ii. 642, 

iii. 32, iv. 685, v. 714, vii. 29, 

580, ix. 22, 47 ; II Pen/. 84 ; 

Arc. 48 ; Com. 113,235, 883 ; 

Od. Nat. 179 ; Pf- vi. 12. 
nightingale, P. L. iv. 602, vii. 

435 ; Com. 234, 566 ; Son. i. 1. 
nightingales, P.L. iv. 771. 
night's, P. L. xii. 264 ; Arc. 

39- 
nights, P. £. ix. 63, 137, x. 

680 ; P. ft. ii. 460. 
Nile, P. L.i. 343, 413, xii. 157; 

Od. Nat. 211. 
Nilotick, P. ft. iv. 71. 
Nilus, P. L. iv. 283. 
nimble, P. L. iv. 866, vi. 73, 

xi. 442. 
nine, P. L. vi. 871, vii. 6; ^rc. 

64. 
ninefold, P. L. ii. 436. 
nine times, P. L. i. 50. 
Nineveh, P. R. iii. 275. 
Ninus, P. ft. iii. 2/6. 
nip, £/?. JIT. JFw. 36. 
Niphates, P. L. iii. 742. 
nipt, S.A. 1577. 
Nifibis, P. ft. iii. 291. 
Nifroch, P. L. vi. 447. 
nitre, P. L. ii. 937. 
nitrous, P. L. iv. 815, vi. 512. 
no, no, P. L. ix. 913 ; S. A. 

928. 
nobility, S. A. 1654. 
noble, P. L. vi. 189, xii. 221 ; 

P. ft. iv. 99; S.A. 218,1166, 

1724; y4rc. 82; Com. 31, 

451, 966; £ow. x. 12, xxii. 

1 1 ; Ep. M. Win. 5, 54. 

more noble, P. L. viii. 34. 
noblenefs. P.L. viii. 557. 
nobler, P. L. ii. 116, iv. 288, 

viii. 28, ix. Ill, xi. 411,605; 

P. ft. ii. 482 ; Son. xv. 9. 
nobleft, P.L. i. 552, iv. 217; 

P. ft. ii. 341 ; iv. 52. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



nobly, P. R. iv. 239. 

nocent, P. L. ix. 186. 

no&urnal, P. L. iii. 40, viii. 
134 ; Com. 128. 

nod, Cow. 9^0. 

nodding, Com. 38. 

nods, T/^Z. 28. 

poife, P. L. i. 394, 498. ii. 64, 
657, 896, 957, vi. 211, 487, 
587, 667, 867, viii. 243, x. 
567, 705, xii. 55; S.A. 1472, 
1508,1509,1511,1513,1515; 
Com. 170, 227 ; Son. xii. 3; 
Od.Sol.Muf. 18. 

noifes, P. L. ii. 921. 

noifing, P. P. iv. 488. 

noifome, P.L. xi. 478 ; Arc. 49. 

none, P. L. i. 273, ii. 32, Q55, 
300, 331, 423, 466, 776, 802, 
814, iii. 132, 182, 202, 219, 
235,289,443,444,669,738, 
iv.45, 80, 81,579,675, 704, 
737, v. 44, 5% 62, 99, 362, 
538, 791, 805, 850, 860, vi. 
159,237,442,508,592,702, 
vii. 124, 333, 378, viii. 233, 
285, 624, ix. 92, 118, 1140, 
x. 80, 84, 820,998, xi. 231, 
6l2,6'73,837,xii.522; PJi. 
i. 328, ii. 62, 146, 177, 28S, 
289, 315, 318, 358, iv. 184, 
315, 487; 5.^. 18,344, 531, 
1628 ; Arc. 72 ; Com. 137, 
702; Pf. lxxxv. 8,lxxxvi. 25. 

nook, P. L. i. 707, iv. 789, ix. 
277 ; H Pen/. 92 ; Com. 500. 

noon, P. L. i. 743, iii. 6l6, iv. 
564,627,v. 174, 231, ix. 210, 
401,739, x. 93, xii. 1; P.P. 
ii. 156, 292; S.A, 80, 683, 
1612; llPcnf. 68. 

noon-tide, P. L. ii. 309, iv. 
216, ix. 403. 

nor, P. L. i. 28, 95, 335, 399, 
718, ii. 272, 341, 912, iv. 
272,275,280,337,338,707, 
708, 767, v. 60, 147, 372, 
434, 435, 548, 727, vi. 69, 



70, 323, 810, 823, vii. 6, 
253, 435, viii. 218, 219, ix. 
41, 124. 126, 186,231,306, 
475,507,573,701,927,932, 
1005, 1023, 1121, ll6l, x. 
171,220,270,366,712,817, 
1097, xi. 9, 216, 307, 381, 
396, 426, 427, 547, 553, 579, 
645, xii. 298, 390, 395, 436 ; 
P.P. i. 28, 308, 311, 366, 

402, ii. 55, 62, 94, 247, 330, 
iii. 112, 119, 159,327,330, 
337, 420, iv. 110, l6l, 304, 
421 ; S. A. 381, 404, 543, 
551, 589, 592, 620, 628, 647 # 
6'74, 687, 783, 792, 886, 887, 
913, 930, 970, 1022, 1023, 
1056, 1065, 1258, 1504; Lye. 
54, 55 ; Com. 88, 667, 930 ; 
Son. xxii. 4, 7; Od. Nat. 
216, 224; Vac. Ex. 73; Ep. 
llobf II. 13, 16; Eurip. 4; 
Pf. i. 14, vi. 2, lxxxi. 39, 

46, lxxxii. 17, lxxxvi. 26. 
north, P. L. i. 351, iv. 069, 

783, v. 689, 726, 755, vi. 79, 
x. 654, 6'95 ; P. P. iv. 28, 
78, 448 ; Son. xv. 7- 

north-eaft, P. L. iv. l6l. 

northern, P. R. iii. 338. 

northward, P. L. xii. 139- 

north-wind, P. L. ii. 489, x »- 
842. 

Norumbega, P. L. x. 696. 

•Norway, P. L. i. 203. 

Norwegian, P. L. i. 293. 

noftrils, P. L. vii. 525, ix. 196, 
x. 280. 

not, P. L. i. 94, 335, 336, 442, 
717, ii. 212, iii. 106, 624, 
iv. 241, 268, 765, 852,925, 
v. 32, 540, 548, vi. 345, 402, 

403, 809, vii. 172, viii. 48, 
49,278, 405, ix. 14, 27, 10, 

47, 70, 99, 1H), 140, 185, 
242, 470, 475, 487, 505, 701, 
819,5)27,1138, 116.9, x. 355, 
495, 526, 563, 571, 593, 764, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

S08, xi. 9, 213, 239, 336, II. 5; Soph A; Pf. i. 1, 3, 4, 

381,443,496,537,547,579, 9, 12, m. 17, iv. 19, v. 9, vi, 

681, 891, xii. 25, 30, 78, 1, vii. 45, lxxx. 73, lxxxi. 

127, 133,216", 388,394,410, 16*, 17, 27, 45, lxxxii. 17, 

493, 514; P. R. i. 35, 77, lxxxiii. 1, 2, 4, lxxxv. 2, 

79, 88, 97, 214, 271, 292, 55, 

297, 307, 337, 347, 360, 379, not at all, S. A. 245. 

437,441, 446, 469, 472, 495, not now, P. L. x. 846; P. R. 

496,ii.8,54,6l,94,202,249, iii. 95. 

230, 299, 306, 321, 324, 369, not only, P. L. iv. 668, x. 826; 

379, 383, 398, 428, 444, 453, S. A. 1654. 

454, 458, iii. 38, 42, 52, 53, not fo, P. L. iii. 400, viii. 4l6, 

106, 130, 143, 151, 172, 201, x. 795, 910 ; P. R. i. 362 ; 

215,236,337,371,385,398, S. A. 818;P/.i. 11. 

iv. 131, 165, 286, 287, 303, not yet, P. R. iii. 397, iv. 395. 

319, 323, 350, 352, 476, 485, note, P. L. iii. 40, iv. 683. 

561, 573; S. A. 56, 96, 193, notes, P. L. 494, 548, iii. \J 9 

204, 241, 245, 249, 254, 286, v. 199, ix. 6 ; P. it. iv. 246, 

300,315,325,349,404,424, 437; L'AL 139; II Penf. 

479, 495, 516, 588, 602, 6*06, 106 ; Son. i. 5 ; Od. PaJ. 9. 

671,705,725,738,754,760, nothing, P. L. i. 27, 11-97, 

766,769,782,788.808,815, 101, iv. 418, vi. 495, viiu 

858, 880, 895,916,920,929, 571, ix. 232, 345, 574, 722, 

952,971,1009,1028,1074, 1039, x. 869, 1010, xii. 

1076, 1077, 1091, 1104, 186; P. R. ii. 169, iii. 29, 

1113, 1130, 1132, 1157, 79, 135, 389, iv. 157, 158, 

1182, 1214, 1219, 1229, 292; S. A. 207, 374, 474, 

1232, 124-7, 1254, 1255, 801, 881, 9^, 1033, 1163, 

1256, 1,322, 1323, 1329, 1239, 1385, 1424, 1484, 

1332, 136*5, 1368, 1371, 1528, 1721, 1723; Lye. 129; 

1379, 1414, 1418, 1481, Com. 722 ; Vac. Ex. 81; Pf. 

1495, 1500, 1502, 1504, iv. 12. 

1518, 1526, 1553, 1604, notice, S. A. 250. 

1643, 1665; Lye. 10, 12, notion, P. L. vii. 179; Com. 

67, 76, 97 ; 11 Pen/. 123 ; 785. 

Arc. 23, 33, 109; Com. 16, notions, P. L. viii. 187. 

50, 74, 191, 223, 229, 273, notorious, S. A. 1186. 

366, 370, 404, 416. 477, 488, Notus, P. L. x. 702. 

491, 502, 504, 508, 577, 580, novelty, P. L. x. 891. 

585, 590, 633, 663, 6*75, 690, nought, P. L. ii. 6/9, iii. 158, 

6*91, 702, 704, 724, 737, 739, 207, 453, vi. 382, ix. 786 ; 

788, 802, 809, 820, 899,942, P. R. i. 181, iii. 393, iv. l6l, 

946; Son viii. 9, xiii. 3, xvi. 208; S. A. 588, 779, 1215; 

2, xviii. 5, xix. 9, xx. 14, Com. 204; Od. Nat 218; Pf. 

xxii. 6; Orf. JVrtf. 15, 58, vii. 12. 

170, 226; Od. D. F. I. 11, novice, P. R. iii. 241. 

64; Vac. Ex. 11, 15, 19, 83; nourifh, P. £. iv. 6'70, v, 183, 

Fore, of Con. 4 ; Dante, I. 2, 325 ; P. it. i. 230. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



nourifher, P. L. v. 398. 

nourifhment, P. L. v. 421, 483, 
vii. 130, xi. 533. 

now, P. L. i. 54, 90, 279, 323, 
361, 571, ii. 276, 311,427, 
469, 634, iii. 13, 72, 86, 
484, 485, 551, 636, iv. 232, 
233, 391, 397, 398, 402, 735, 
776, 839, v. 1, 175, 269, 
578, 627, 642, 658, 678, 700, 
721, 859, 884, vi. 12, 103, 
165, 263,304,418, 597, 797, 
842,900, 901, vii. 60, 283, 
305, 463, 499, 519, 604, viii. 
57, 64, 126, 204, 247, 452, 
472, ix. v. 9, 51, 54, 70, 
117,145,164,192,212,412, 
436, 453, 469, 480, 493, 523, 
594, 664, 680, 742, 786, 90 1 , 
929, 950, 1007, 1017, 1027, 
1032, 1076, 1083, 1091, 
1126, ,1128, 1138, 1168, 
1181, x. 47, 92, 94,98, 120, 
191, 212, 215, 231 , 234, 258, 
303, 312, 320, 325, 346, 36l, 
372, 382, 385, 405, 439, 462, 
466,473,503,510,516,519, 
522, 529, 541, 555, 587, 592, 
690, 695, 722, 731, 822, 885, 
942, 948, 1064, xi. 30, 52, 
90,93, 137, 156, 172, 177, 
209,226,278,331,348,41.9, 
423, 462, 555, 588, 625, 637, 
653,711,714,742,766,776, 
783, 839, 841, 848, S.K), 852, 
874, xii. 130, 135, l64, 240, 
273, 276, 3/6, 383, 474, 544, 
572, 588, 614, 625 ; P. R. i. 
2, 18, 67 ', 103, 143. 150, 
164, 174,193,245,271,287, 
314, 354, 413, 460, 499, 502, 
ii.9, 32, 40, 55, 66, 95, 100, 
146, 244, 320, 366, iii. 39, 
98, 294, 413, iv. 4.3, .SO, 9<>, 
101, 132, 179, 187*365,380, 
382,409,432,540, 554, 606, 
635; S.A. 22, 40, 73, 158, 
188, 195, *133, '267, 338, 355, 



528,726,727,731,882,941, 
998, 1065, 1075, 1081, 
1088, 1148, 1305, 1306, 
1314, 1348, 1434, 1437, 
1452, 1529, 1533, 1547, 
1573, 1703; Lye. 37, 38, 
163, 182, 190, 191 ; Arc. 
10; Com. 43, 82, 92, 94, 
107,116,124,150, 171,192, 
202, 216, 264, 351, 353, 643, 

768, 771, 820, 976, 1012; 
Son. i. 9, xi« 4, xx. 2 ; Od. 
&at. 19, 104, 167; Od. Pqf. 
8, 40; Od. Cir. 6; Ep. M. 
Win. 25, 74; Od.May-M.l; 
Vac. Ex. 8, 54, 55 ; Fore, of 
Con. 11; Od. Hor. 9 ; Brut. 
3, 10; Arioft. 2; Pf. ii. 22, 
iv. 5, 6, lxxx. 57, 65, lxxxi. 
58, lxxxiii. 1, 5, 46, 47, 
lxxxv. 29, lxxxviii. 71. 

now, now, P. R. ii. 35. 
noxious, P. L. ii. 2l6, vii. 498, 

x. 660; P.P. i. 313, iv. 460. 
null'd, S. A. 935. 
number, P. L. i. 571, iii. 706, 

iv. 687, v. 843, 901, vi. 49, 

769, 809, vii. 147, 6*13, viii. 
38, 422, x. 888; S.A. 1667 ; 
Com. 148; Ep. M. Win. 11. 

number, (verb) Arc. 59. 

without number, P. L. i. 
791, i». 346. 
number'd, P. L. vi. 229, viii. 

19, x. 576, xi. 40; S. A. 

1478; Ep. Hobf. II. 8. 
numbering, P. R. iii. 410; Son. 

xi. 4. 
numberlefs, P. L. i. 344, 780, 

iii. 719, V. 653, vi. 224, vii. 

197, 492, viii. 108, ix. 548. 
numbers, P. 1*. iii. 38, 332, 

.')!()', 380, viii. 1 14, 421, ix. 

144, xi. 4S0; P. Ii. iv. 255; 

S. A. 1450; Ep. W.Sh. 10. 
numbers (verb) Ep, Hobf. II; 7« 
numbers numberlefs, P. /i. iii. 

310. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



numerous, P. L. i. 675, ii. 993, 

iv. 385, v. 150, vi. 231, 830, 

vii. 418, 621, x. 397, xi. 

752, xii. 132; P. R. iii. 344; 

Pf. v, 18. 

more numerous, P. L. v. 389, 
xi. 130. 

too numerous, P. L. xii. l67» 
numnefs, S. A. 571. 
nun, II Pen/. 31. 
nuptial, P. L. iv. 339, 710, viii. 

487, 510, x. 994, xi. 280, 

590; 5.^.385, 1194,1743, 

Lye. 196. 
nuptials, 5. A. 1023. 
nurs'd, Lye. 23 ; Com. 34. 
nurfe, S. A. 1487, 1488; Com. 

377; Vac. Ex. 61. 
nurfery, P. X. viii. 46. 
nurling, S. A. 924. 
nurfling, S. A. 633. 
nurture, S. A. 362. 
nut-brown, UAL 100. 
nutriment, P. L. vii. 408. 
nutriments, P. i. v. 496. 
nymph, P. L. iv. 707 ; UAl. 

25 ; Com. 54, 230, 422, S24. 
nymph-like, P. X. ix. 452. 
nymphs, P. P. ii. 355 ; Lye. 

50; J/ Pmf. 137; ^rc. 1, 

96 ; Com. 883. 
Nyfeian, P. L. iv. 275. 



O. 

O, P. L. i. 17, 75, 84, 128, 
622, ii. 119,430, 445, 496, 
727, 728, 810, iii. 144, 16'8, 
274, 275, 410, iv. 1, 32, 58, 
79,358,440,715, 774,866, 
904, 950, 951, v. 28, 58, 67 ', 
92, 445, 469, 507, 542, 563, 
809, 877, vi. 114, 418, 609, 
723, vii. 231, 524, viii. 57, 
357, ix. 154, 163, 343, 404, 
579, 795, 896, 961, 1067, 
1084, 1114, x. 125, 235, 



354, 720, 729, 741, 771, 78S, 
819, 842, 860, 888, 965, xi. 
84, 193, 268, 273, 450, 463; 
500, 629, 675, 763, 870, xii. 
64, 115, 270, 375, 469, 
P. P.i.44, 196, 230, ii. 66, 
iv. 417, 420, 5Q0; S. A. 23, 
36, 52, 67 7 68, 80, 83, 101, 
117, 155, 164, 193, 228, 235, 
356, 410, 1093, 1508, 1571, 
1660 ; Lye. i. 85, 164 ; II 
Pen/. 103; Com. 179, 195 
213, 238, 250, 501, 507, 562, 
566, 580, 706, 815 ; Son. i. 
1, 7, xi. 12, xv. 9, xviii. 1, 
xxiii. 13; Od. Nat. 24; Od. 
Pa& 19; Od. Cir. 15, 26; 
Od.D. F.I.I; Od.Hor. 5; 
Pf. vi. 7, 8, viii. 1, 12, 23, 
lxxx. 30, lxxxi. 33, 50, 55, 
lxxxxv. 2, 6, 8, 30, lxxxvi. 
1, 2, 10, 26, 37, 4.1, 49, 53, 
57, exxxvi. 9. 

cak, P. L. vi. 574; P. R. i. 
305 ; II Pen/. 60, 135. 

oaken, S: A. 1123 ; Arc. 45. 

oaks, P. L. i. 613 ; P. R. iv. 
417; Lye, 186; UAL 82. 

oar, P. L. ii.942. 

oary, P. L. vii. 440. 

oat, Lye. 88. 

oaten, Lye. 33. 

oath, P. L. ii. 352. 

oh, P.L. ix. 78; S. A, 1516; 
Od.D.F. I. 34, 36, 41, 64; 
P/. lxxxiii. 49. 

obdurate, P. L. i. 58, vi. 790, 
xii. 205. 

obdured, P. L. ii. 568, vi. 
785. 

obedience, P. L. iii. 95, 107, 
190, 191, 269, iv. 428, 520, 
955, v. 514, 522. 537, vi.740, 
902, vii. 159, viii. 240, 325, 
ix. 36S, xii. 397, 403, 408; 
P. It iv. 80; Od. Cir. 25; 
Od. Sol. Muf. 24. 

obedient, P. L. v. 501, 514, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



vii. 498, xii. 246; Ep. Hob/. 

ft. 29- 
obey, P. L> ii. 865, iv. 636, v. 

551, vi. 185, 741, viii. 634, 

x. 145, xi. 112, xii. 56 1 ; 

S. A. 1372. 
obey'd, P. X. i, 337, v. 704, 

806, vi. 185, vii. 48, 453, 

viii. 272, ix. 570, 701, xii. 

86; 6'. A. 895, 900. 
obeying, P. X. ix. 868, x. 14 ; 

S.A. 1641. 
obeys, P. X. ix. 351, xii. 126, 

212; P.P. iii. 159- 
obey'ft, P. P. i. 452. 
object, P. X. viii. 456, 535, ix. 

222,361, x.936,996,xi. 201 ; 

P.P.ii. 103; S.A. 559, 568. 
objed, (verb) P. X. iv. 896, 
objects, P. X. iii. 621, viii. 

609, xii. 9 ; P. P. ii- 225 ; 

S. A. 71. 
oblige, P. X. ix. 980. 
oblique, P. X. iii. 564, ix. 510, 

x. 671. 
obliquities, P. X. viii. 132. 
oblivion, P. X. ii. 583, vi. S80. 
oblivious, P. X. i. 266. 
obloquy, P. X. v. 813; P. R. 

iii. 131; S. A. 452. 
obnoxious, P. X. ix. 170, 1094; 

S. A. 106. 
obfcene, P. X. i. 406. 
obfcure, P. X. i. 429, 524, ii. 

132, iii. 15, iv. 840, vii. 

229, viii. 192, 230, ix. 159, 

x. 366, xi. 2S3; P. P. i. 24, 

287 ; P. P. i. 24, 287, iii. 

22, 94. 
obfcure, (verb) P. X. ii. 406. 
obfcur'd, P. X. i. 594, iv. 571, 

v. 841, vi. 585, ix. 797, 

1086, xii. 86; S. A. 688; 

Com. 536. 
ob leu rely, P. X. xii. 543. 
abfeures, P. R. ii. 101. 
•bfequious, P. X. vi. 10, 783, 

viii. 509- 



obfequy, S. A. 1732'. 

obferve, P. X. vii. 78, x. 334 f 

xi. 530, xii. 563; P.P. iii, 

235, iv. 477. 
obferv'd, P. X. i. 588, iv. 849, 

ix. 94, x. 430, xi. 191, 228, 

817 
obferves, P X. v. 262. 
obferving, P. X. iv. 737. 
obftacle, P. X. iii. 6l5, viii. 

624. 
obftinacy, P. X. x. 114. 
obftriaion, 5.^.312. 
obftrua, P. X. v. 257, x. 636, 

xii. 52. 
obtain, P. X. iii. 156, 660, iv. 

93, vii. 112, ix. 20, x. 75, 

xi. 47; P.P. iii. 354; S.A. 

909. 
obtain'd, P. X. ii. 250, x. 938, 

ii. 73, iii. 168 ; S. A. 814. 
obtains, P. X. iii. 546. 
obtrude, P. P. ii. 387. 
obtruded, P. X. xi. 504. 
obtruding, Cow. 759. 
obtrud'fl, P, P. iv. 493. 
obtrufive, P. X. viii. 504. 
obtufe, P. X. xi. 541. 
obvious, P. X. vi. 69, viii. 158,, 

504, x. 106, xi. 374 ; S. A. 

95. 
occafion, P. X. i. 178, ii. 341, 

v. 453, ix. 480, 974; P. R. 

iii. 174; S. A. 224, 237, 

433, 425 ; Lye. 6 ; Com. $1. 
occafionally, P. X. viii. 556. 
occafion'd, P. X. xii. 475. 
occafion's, P. P. iii. 173. 
occahons, S. A. 1596. 
ocean, P. X. i. 202, ii. 183, 

892, iii. 76, 539, iv. l65, 

354, 540, v. 426, vii. 271, 

279, 412, 624, ix. 80, xi. 

827; Com. 976; Son. xix. 

1 3 ; Od. Nat. 66 ; Brut. 7 ; 

Vf. cxiv. 13. 
Oceanus, Com. 868. 
ocean-brim, P. X. v. 140, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



October's, Corn. 930. 

odds, P. L. iv. 447, vi. 319, 

441, ix. 820, x. 374; Arc. 

23. 
ode, Od. Nat. 24. 
odes, P.P. i. 182, iv. 257- 
odious, P. L. i. 475, ii. 781, 

vi. 408, ix. 880, xi. 704; Pf. 

lxxxviii. 34, 35. 
odioufly, S. A. 873 ; Ariojl. 2. 
odoriferous, P. L. iv. 157« 
odorous, P. L. iv. 166, 248, 

696, v. 482; 5. X 720; Arc. 

56 ; Com. 993 ; Son. ix. 10 ; 

Od. p?#: 16*. 
odour, P. L. ix. 579- 
odours, P. L. ii. 245, 843, iv. 

162, v. 293, 349, viii. 517; 

P. R. ii. 865 ; S. A. 987 ; 

Com. 106, 712; Od.Nat. 23; 

CW. Hor. 1. 
Oechalia, P. X. ii. 542. 
o'eT, P. L. i. 342, 365, 562, 

725, 742, ii. 62, 491, 620, 

944, 948, 1005, iii. 359, 395, 

494, 521,527, 653, iv. 191, 

258, 538, 609, v. 140, 279, 

vi. 746, 840, viii. 83, 546, 

xi. 202, 206, 747, xii. 630 ; 

P. R. i. 218, ii. 478, iii. 167, 

267, iv. 23, 223, 543 ; S. A. 

629 ; L'Al. 64; Arc. 84; 

Com. 437, 799, 803, 898, 

975 ; Son. viii. 7, xiv. 10, 

xviii. 11; Od. Nat. 181; 

Od.Paf. 26; Vac. Ex. 75; 

Pf. viii. 17, Ixxxiii. 68, 

lxxxviii. 23. 
overblown, P. L. i. 172. 
o'ercome, P. R» i. l6l*; S, A, 

51. v 
oer-flow'd, P. L. viii. 266. 
o'er-fraught, Com. 732. 
o'ergrown, Lye. 40. 
o'erlaid, II Pen/. 16. 
o'er-leap'd, P. L. iv. 583. 
o'ermatch'd, P. L. ii. 855. 
o'erpower'd, P. L, i, 145. 



o'erfhades, P. L. v. 376, 
o'erfhadow, P. R. i. 140. 
o'erfpread, P. L. ii. 489» 
o'erthrew, P. L. i. 306. 
o'erwatch'd, P. L. ii. 288. 
overwearied, P. L. vi. 392. 
o'erwhelm, P.£. vi. 489; S> A. 

370. 
o'erwhelm'd, P. L. i. 76. 
o'erworn, S. A. 123. 
Oeta, P. X. ii. 545. 
offal, P. L. x. 633. 
offence, P. L. iii. 355, 410, v. 

34, ix. 726, x. 171, 854; 

S. A. 767, 1004, 1218. 
offend, P. L. i. 187, vi. 465, 

viii. 379, x. 110, xi. 236; 

S. A. 1333, 1414. 
offended, P. L. v. 135, x. 488, 

566, 916, xi. 149, 811; 

P. R. iv. 196; S. ^. 515; 
-II Pen/. 21 ; Pf. vii. 44. 
offending, P. L, ii. 212. 
offenfive, P. L. i. 443. 
offer, P. L. ii. 469, iii. 237, xi. 

327, xii. 363 ; P. R ii. 399, 

iii. 380, iv. l6'0, 190 ; S. A. 

1255 ; Com. 702 ; P/. iv. 23. 
offer'd, P. X. iii. 187, 270, 

409, v. 63, vi. 617, ix. 30O, 

802, xi.506, xii. 425; P.P. 

ii. 328, 449, iv. 156, 377, 

468, 493 ; S. A. 246, 390, 

516. 
offering, P. L. iii. 234, xi. 441, 

456; S. A. 26, 344, 1152; 

Com. 64. 
offerings, P. L. i. 475, ii. 246; 

S. A. 519;P/:iv. 23. 
o-ffers, P. R. iv. 155, 171. 
office, P. L. ii. 859, v. 103, vii. 

344, ix, 39, 49, x. 657, 

1002, xii. 240, 311; P. P. 

i. 374, ii. 463; S. A. 924, 

Com. 89, 90S ; Od. D. F. I. 

76 ; Ep. Hobf. I. 14. 
officer, S. A. 1306. 
officers, Com, 218. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



offices, P. L. x. 960. 

officiate, P. L. viii. 22. 

officious, P. L. viii. 99, ix. 104; 
P. P. ii. 302. 

offspring, P. P. ii. 310, 781, 
iii. 1, iv. 385, 751, vi. 2/6', 
viii. 86, ix. 273, x. 238, 349, 
781, xi. 358, 613, 755; 
P. R. ii. 440, iii. 375, iv. 
399 J Com. 34 ; Od. D. F. I. 
76. 

oft, P. L. i. 205, 275, 371, 432, 
ii. 131, iii. 185, 532, 599, 
66l, 686, iv. 405, 449, 684, 
v. 32, 56, 110, 112, 374, 
402, vii. 440, 569, 570, viii. 
25, 651, ix. 358, 399, 515, 
524, 559, 638, 641, 842, 845, 
1108, x. 119,567, 570, 851, 
xi. 492, 721, xii. 48, 94, 
192, 377, 496; P.P. i. 270, 
363, 393, 394, ii. 105, 437, 
iii. 106, 160, l6l, 273, iv. 
248, 303, 565; S. A. 157, 
215, 382, 682, 692, 759, 813, 
1062, 1 127, 1745, 1749 ; Lye. 
30; UAL 53, 125; 11 Penf. 
27, 46, 71, 73, 87, 121; 
Arc. 42; Com. 252, 323, 
376, 459, 471, 494, 623, 843, 
999; S071. xx. 14; Hor. 
III. 2. 
oft-invocated, S. A. 575. 
as oft, P. L. ix. 400, 515, x. 
568, 852, xii. 319; P. P. ii. 
234, iv. 17. 
full oft, P. L. ii. 763. 
how oft, P. L. ii. 263 ; Od. 

Hor. 5. 
more oft, P. L. i. 493 ; S.A. 

268, 1287- 
fo oft, P.L.vi.94, ix. 1082; 
P.P. iii. 167, iv. 4, 446. 
often, P. L. i. 387; P. jR. i. 
199; SL-d 351 ; Co///. 569 ; 
Od. Nat. 74. 

how ofu-n, P. J,, iv. 680. 
lo often, Arc. 29; S<m. xxi. 4. 



ofteft, P. L. v.489; ?•&. & 

228, 486. 
oft-times, P.L,i. 166, viii. 571 ;• 

P. ii. i. 472, iv. 460. 
Og, S.A. 1080; P/i exxxvi. 

69. 
oil, P. X, xii. 19 ; P. P. iii. 
259; Com. l99;Od.Paf.i6, 
oils, Com. 840. 

old, P. P, 420, 477, 519, 543, 
552, 565, 639, ii. 593, 988, 
1 002, iii. 36, 421, 604, iv.l 65, 
276, 666, vii. 7. ix.- 101, 441, 
xi. 11,243,386,668; P.P. 
i. 46, ii 21, 87, 147, iii. 15, 
178, 276, 367, iv.91, 278; 
S. A. 139, 148, 328, 333, 
1441 ; P//c.36,53, 160; L'AL 
97; II Pen/. 173; Arc. 98; 
Com. 33, 45, 439, 822, 852, 
874, 923 ; Son. x. 8, xvii. l r 
xxiii. 6 ; Od. Nat. 168 ; Vac. 
Ex. 47, 69 ; Ep. Hobf. I. 1, 
II. 8; Fore, of Con. 20; Pf. 
vi. 14, lxxxiii. 37. 

older, S. A. 1489. 

old age, P. L. xi. 538 ; 5. A. 
572, 700, 925, 1487, 1488. 
of old, P. P. ii. 38, iii. 568, 
vii. 200, ix. 145, 670, x. 226; 
P. R. ii. 174, 358, iii. 378, 
iv. 604; S. A. 1533; Com. 
516 ; Son. xviii. 3 ; Od. Nat. 
119; Pntf. 9; Pf- vii. 52, 
lxxxi. 13. 

olive, P. P. iv. 244 ; Od. Nat. 
47. 

olive-leaf, P. L. xi. 860. 

Olympian, P. L. ii. 530, vii. 3. 

Olympias, P. L. ix. 509. 

Olympus, P.L. i. 516, vii. 7, 
x. 583; Od. D.F.I. 44,. 

omen, 6'. ^. 967. 

ominous, P. L. iii. 123; P. P„ 
iv. 481 ; Com. 6l. 

omit, .S'. A. 602. 

omnifick, P. L. vii. 217- 

omnipotence, P. i>. v. 7&2 r 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vi. 159, 684, vii, 194, viii. 
108. 

omnipotent, P. L. i. 49, 273, ii. 
398, iii. 372, iv.86, 725, v. 
616, vi. 136, 227, vii. 36, 516*, 
ix. 927. 

omniprefence, P. L. vii. 590, 
xi. 336. 

omnifcient, P. L. vi. 430, vii. 
123, x. 7. 

on, P. L. x. 394 ; P. R. i. 29, 
82, 134, 138, "299, 303, 304, 
339, 479, ii- 5, 16, 23, 25, 
175,189,207,210,212,215, 
217, 386, 410, 424, 440, 462, 
iii. 61,173,271,327, iv. 28, 
33, 35, 49, 64, 69, 93, 108, 
115,147,159,166,201,219, 
312, 371, 378,416, 506, 523, 
582, 583, 585, 587, 634, 638 ; 

' S.A. 129,224,241,242,246, 
258, 262, 375, 486, 496, 531, 
613,614,638,717,726,741, 
973, 1118, 1156, 1201, 1202, 
1330, 1341, 1493, 1617,1677, 
1679 ;Lyc. 124,138 ;L'Al. 34, 
98, ISO; II Pen/. 44, 66, 115 ; 
Arc. 67, 107 ; Com. 209, $93, 
599, 635, 651, 652, 684, 721, 
881,965 ; Son. vii. 3, viii. 6, 
xi. 5, xiv. 9> 12, xvi.s5, xx. 6, 
xxi. 1 ; Od. Nat. 122, 159, 
190; Od.Paf 5,46,50, 51, 
56; Od D.F.L 25; Ep. 
M. Win. 46 ; Vac. Ex. 64 ; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 4, 14; Od. 
Hor. 2; Brut. 3; P/. ii. 13, 
17, iii. 21, iv. 29, v. 32, vii. 
39.1xxx.79>lxxxi.26,lxxxii. 
3, 17, lxxxviii, 46. 

once, P. L. i.90, 274, 316, 471, 
607, ii. 613, 748, 839, 876, 
1023, 1050, iii. 233,353, 689, 
iv. 39, 125, 828,959, v. 567, 
vi. 270,500, 907, vii. 17, 132, 
ix. 1125, x. 296, 526, 572, 
587, 729, xi. 369, 508; P. R. 
i. 104, ii. 14, 214, iii. 162, 



170, 234, 438, iv. 132, 133, 

574 ; S. A. 22, 197, 334, 36s, 

633, 705, 885, 932, 1005, 

1037,1417,1474; Lye. 131 ; 

L'Al.20', Cow. 164,637, 822; 

Son. x. 1; Od.Nat.5, 126; 

Od. Puff: 40 ;0d. D.F.I. 52; 

Od. on Time, 19; Od. Sol. 

Muf. 19 ; Ep. M. Win. 23 ; 

Vac. Ex. 17, 48, 67 ; Ariqft. 2 ; 

Pf> ii. 27. 
once again, P. L.vi.6l8; P.R 9 

ii. 17; S.A. 1174. 
once and again, P. L. xi. 857. 

at once, P. L. i. 59, 788, ii. 
61, 155,475, 476, iii. 59, 
543, iv. 56, 143, 853, v. 
228,275,vi.251,319,582, 
*S27, vii. 462, 475, ix. 303, 
586, 779, x. 892, 945, 
999, xi. 76l, 768; P.R. 
i. 196, ii. II; S.A. 1587; 
Ep. M. Win. 30 ; Pf. iv. 
37- 

not once, Com. 74. 
once more, P. L. i. 268, ii. 721, 

985, iii. 175,178,iv.941,xu 

75, 125, xii. 211. 
one, P. L. i. 4, 32, 62, 79, 252, 

v. 783, 784, 821, vi. 23, 24, 

viii. 295, 421, ix. 140, 211, 

546,958,xi.44,xii.24;P.#. 

i.2, 4, 216, 307, ii. 216, 300, 

iii. 53, 84, 256, 362, iv. 317 ; 

S. A. 120, 265, 348, 560, 973, 

1017, 1047, 1518 ; UAL 107; 

II Pen/. 69 ; Com. 133, 483, 

811 ; Son. xi. 7, xix. 3 ; Od. 

Nat. 71; Ep. M. Win. 7; 

Vac. Ex. 76 ; Ep. Hobf. 1. 3, 

II. 1, 20; P/. lxxxiii. 18, 

67, lxxxiv. 33. 

all one, P. L. vi. l65. 

all in one, P. L. vi. 779' 
one by one, P. L. v. 697 ; S. A. 

1457. 
ones, P/*. iv, 7» 
only, P. L. i. 64, ii. 497, 623 f 



vol. r. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



728, iii. 65, 105, 155, 268, 
274, 281, 398, 683, 701, iv. 
91,178, 199,251,299,423, 
428,518, 895, v. 5,6*9, 206, 
366, 402, 639, 779, 897, vi. 
239,491, 810, vii. 123, viii. 
14, 155,174, 178,447, 532, 
6l6, ix. 28, 129, 327, 380, 
923, 1121, x. 220, 832, 841, 
921, 931, 9^6, 1043, 1051, 
xi. 304, 336,618, 689, 701, 
765, 808, xii. 67, 401, 513, 
562,581; P. JR. i. 226, 349, 
ii. 13, 221, 229, 289,*336, 
404, 478, iv. 294, 320, 364, 
420, 466 , S. A. 264, 390, 
557,630,687,863,1123,1190, 
1650, 1743 ; Com. 126, 765 ; 
Son. xvi. 2, xix. 14 ; Od. Nat. 
37 ; Vac. Ex. 25 ; Ep. Hobf. 
II. 34; Pf. lxxxiv. 47, 48. 
not only, P.L. iv. 99 1, viii. 
338, ix. 681, x. 46l, xii. 
447; S. ^.579,617,^654. 
onfet, P. L. ii. 364, vi. 98. 
onward, P. L. ii. 6*75, v. 298, 
vi. 550, 768, 831, x. 811 ; 
S. A. 1 ; Son. xxii. 9. 
Oofe, Vac. Ex.92. 
oofe, P.L. vii. 303. 
oozy, Od. Nat. 124. 
opacous, P. L. iii. 418, viii. 23. 
opal, P.L. ii. 1049. 
opaque, P. L. iii. 6l9- 
ope, P. L. xi. 423 ; Com. 626. 
op'd, S. A. 452. 
open, P. L. i. 662, ii. 41, 51, 
119; 187, 878, 884, iii. 514, 
672, iv. 245, 721, v. 138, vi. 
560, 6ll, vii. 390, viii. 460, 
ix. 692, x. 187, 232, 419, 
533, K)6l ;S.A. 1172,1609 
open, (verb) P. L. v. 127, vi 
23$, vii. 158, 565, 5^6, 569. 
ix. 866, ; 0d. Nat. 148. 
opcn'd, P. L. i. 689, ii. 175, 883, 
iii. .526, vii. 205, 575, viii. 
465, ix. 708,985, 1053, 1071, 



xi. 429; -P. #. i- 30, ii. 294, 

opener, P. L. ix. 875, xi. 598. 

openfl, P. L. ix. 8O9. 

opening, P. L. i. 724, ii. 755, 

777, iii. 538, vi. 481, 860, 

vii. 318, 454, ix. 865, x. 234, 

xi. 277, 833, xii. 274 ; LycM. 

openly, P. P. i. 288 ; S.A. 398. 

opens, P. L. iv. 77, vi. 54. 

operation, P. L. viii. 323, ix. 

796, 1012. 
opes, Lye. Ill ; Cow?. 14. 
Ophion, P.L. x. 581. 
Ophir, P. L. xi. 400. 
Ophiuchus, P.L. ii. 709- 
Ophiufa, P.L. x. 528. 
opiate, P. L. xi. 133. 
opinion, P. L. ii. 471, v. 108 ; 

Nor. I. 4. 
opinions, P.L. viii. 78. 
opium, 6'.^. 630. 
opportune, P. L. ii. 396, ix. 85 f 

481. 
opportunely, P. it. ii. 396 ; 

Com. 401. 
opportunity, P. P. iv. 532. 
oppofe, P. L. ii. 419, 6*10, v. 

717, vi. 155, 636. 
oppos'd, P. L. i. 41, 103, v. 808, 

vi. 254, x. 478 ; P. R. i 96. 
oppofite, P. L. ii. 298, ii; 727, 

iv. 460, vi. 128, ?Q6, vii. 376, 

x. 659; P.P. in. 358. 
opposition, P, L. ii. 803, vi. 

314, xi. 664; P. R. iii. 250: 

iv. 386"; S.A. 1050. 
opprefs, P. P. ii. 44; S.A. 232. 
opprefsM, P. L. ii. 13, vi. 655, 

ix. 1045; P. P. ii. 331 ; 

S.A. 1269. 
opp relies, P. L. vii. 129- 
oppreflion P. L. viii. 288, xi. 

672. 
oppretfbur, S.A. 1272. 
oppreflburs, 6'. A. 233. 
opprobrious, P. L. i. 403, ii* 

58, x. 222. 
Ops, P. L. a. 584. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



optick, P. X. i. 288, iii. 590 ; 

P. R. iv. 40. 
oracle, P. X. i. 12, x. 182 ; 

P. 21. i. 460, 463, iii. 13, iv. 

275. 
oracles, P. JR. i. 395, 430, 456. 
oracling, P. R. i. 455. 
oraculous, P. 21. iii. 14. 
orator, P. X. ix. 670. 
orators, P. P. iv. 267, 353. 
oratory, P. X. xi. 8 ; P. jR. iv. 

360. 
orb, P. X. i. 287, ii. 1029, iii. 

589* iv. 592, v. 176, 596, 862, 

vi. 254, vii. 257, 36l, viii. 

152, 156, ix. 82. 
orb in orb, P. X. viii. 84. 
orb'd, Od. Nat. 143. 
orbed, P. X. vi. 543. 
orbicular, P. X. iii. 718, x. 381. 
orbs, P. X. iii. 25, 420, 668, 

670, v. 422, 594, vi. 828, viii. 

30, ix. 109, x. 397 ; Sun. 

xxii. 4 ; Od. Nat. 75. 
Ores, P. X. xi. 835. 
Orcus, P. L. ii. 964. 
ordain, P. X. ii. 915, vii. 343, 

xii. 230; Pf. exxxvi. 21. 
ordain'd, P. X. i. 71, ii. 732, 

iii. 127, 128, 665, iv. 58,215, 

729, v. 526, 615, 802, vi.700, 

809, vii. 187, 590, viii. 106, 

297, ix. 344, 470, x. 1039, 

xi. 164, xii. 226; P. R. iii. 

152, iv. 473; S.A.S62; Pf. 

lxxxi. 17. 
ordiiins, P. X. ii. 201, iv. 636 9 

vi. 175 ; Son. xxi. 11. 
order, P. X. i. 506, 569, ii. 280, 

507, iii. 713, iv. 663, v. 334, 

vi. 522,548,885, ix.402, x. 

443, xi. 736 ; 5. A. 1447- 

in order, P. R. ii. 351 \0d. 
Nat. 244. 
order'd, P. L. i. 565; S. A. 30; 

0</. Po^; 49. 

orderly, P. L. vi. 74. 

orders, P. X. i. 737, v. 588, 



591, 792, x. 615; P.JR, iii. 

112; S.A.672. 
ordering, P. X. viii. 377. 
ore, P. X. i. 6*73, 703, v. 44f, 

xi. 570 ; Lye. 170; Com, 719> 

933. 
Oread, P, X. ix. 387. 
Oreb, P.X. i. 7, 484, xi.74; 

P/ lxxxiii. 41. 
organ, P. X. i, 708, xi 560 ; II 

Pen/. 161 ; Od. Nat 130. 
organick, P. X. ix. 530. 
organs, P. X. iv. 802, vii. 5Q6. 
orgies, P. X. i. 415. 
orient, P. X. i. 546, ii. 399, iii. 

507, iv. 238, 644, v. 2, 175, 

vi. 15, 524, vii. 254, xi. 205 ; 

Com. 65; Od. Nat. 231. 
orifice, P. X. vi. 577* 
original, P. X. i. 592, ii. 375, 

984, ix. 150, 1004, xi.424, 

xii. 83. 
originals, P. X. vi. 511. 
Orion, P. X. i. 305. 
orifons, P. X. v. 145, xi. 137. 
Ormus, P. X. ii. 2. 
ornament, P. X. v. 280, viii. 

538; S.A. 1025,1132. 
ornaments, P. X. ix. 1076. 
ornate, 5. A. 712. 
Orontes, P. X. iv. 273, ix. 80, 
Orphean, P. X. iii. 17, 
Orpheus, Lye. 58; J/ P^ 

105. 
Orpheus', VAl. 145. 
Orus, P. X. i. 478 ; Oi. Nat. 

212. 
ofier, CW?. 89 1. 
ofiers, P. JR. ii. 26. 
Ofiris, P.X. i. 478; (V. tftf, 

213. 
oftentation, P. P# iii. 387. 
other, P. X. i. 194, 412, 607, 

ii. 666,714, 806,977, 1020, 

iii. 17, 33, 131, 132, 21 1, 

442, 450, 566. 567, 725. iv. 

6l, 63, 84, 360, 393, 420, 

431,582,616,621, 703,736, 



n 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

783, v. 132, 177, 259, 36l, 240, 491, 534,649, 864, 89& 

534, 538, 576, 6l8, 884, vi. xii. 28, 67, 6'9, 92, 212, 252> 

376, 413, 442, 485, 807, 821, 256, 420, 453, 478, 565,643 ; 

823, vii. 228, 364, 378, 444, P. R. iii. 406, iv. 270, 463, 

507, viii. 123,139, 148, 169, 543, 595; S. A. 84, 121,267, 

175,243,387,411,480,546, 1055, 1530; II Penf. 36,75? 

581, ix. 94, 103, 251, 260, Arc. 55; Com. 225; Od. Pafj. 

308, 368, 478, 571, 592, 813, 30 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 65. 

1012, 1052, 1093, x. 237, over-arch'd, P. L. i. 304, ix. 

538, 657, 787, 86l, xi. 60, 1107. 

274, 284, 431, 564, 660, xii. over-aw'd, P. L. ix. 460. 

57, 337, 626; P. R. i. 338, over-built, P. L. x. 4l6. 

348, ii. 71,406,478, iii. 53, overcame, P. R. i. 148, iii, 

84,256, iv. 159, 184,486; 325. 

S. A. 246, 592, 768, 875, overcome, P. L. i. 109, 189, 

916, 973, 1096, 1236, 1252, 649, ii. 215, iv. 857, vi. 126, 

1526, 1643; Lye. Il6, 174; ix. 313, 999j xi. 374, 691, 

II AL 85; Com. 100, 684, xii. 267, 390 ; S. A. 365. 

961 ; Son. xxi. 11 ; Od. Pa[j\ overcomes, P. L. i. 648. 

25; Od, D. F. I. 55; Pf. overcoming, P. L. xii. 566. 

lxxx. 48. See Side. over-exquifite, Com. 359. 

other felf, P. L. viii. 450, x. 128. over-fond, P. L. xi. 289- 

no other, P. R. i. 100, 336, over-grown, P. L. iv. 136, 627* 

iv. 44, 290 ; S. A. 723. ix. 210. 

fome other, P R. ii. 254; over-growth, P. L. xii. 166. 

S. A. 1302; Com. 281. over-hardy, Pf. exxxvi. 70. 

other's, P. L. xi. 443, 458 ; over-head, P. L. i. 784, iv. 137, 

S. A. 1087. vi. 212, ix. 1038. 

others, P. L. i. 2l6, ii. 422, over-heard, P. L. ix. 276. 

469, 539, 546, 557, iii. 469, over-hung, P. L. iv. 547. 

iv. 249, 350, 880, v. 241, vi. overjoy'd, P. L, v. 67, viii. 

337, 528, vii. 437, 442, ix. 490 

127, 805, x. 982, xi. 558, over-just, S. A. 514. 

655, 657, xii. 37 ; P. R. i. over-labour'd, S. A. 1327. 

273, ii. 8, 61, 174, 306, 400, overlaid, P. L. i. 714, xii. 250. 

iv. 297; S. A. 78, 1191, over-match, P. R. iv. 7. 

1464; Lye. 67; Vac. Ex. 81. overlay, P. L. x. 370; P. K. 

otherwife, Com. 318. iii. 333. 

©ver, P. L. i. 296, 520, ii. 326, over-leap'd, P. L. iv. 181. 

409, 437, 604, 1027, iii. 530, over-live, P. L. x. 773. 

531, 6*52, iv. 431, v. 370, over-lov'd, P. L. x. IO19. 

648, 795, 820, 821, 832, vi. over-match'd, P. P. ii. 146. 

75, 76, 406, 757, vii. 127, over-much, P. L. viii. 56*5, is 

278,428,429,521,522,533, 1178; S. A. 213. 

6*29, viii. 301, ix. 77, 1130, over-multitude, Com. 731. 

x. 196, 253, 257, 301, 309, overpafs'd, P. R. ii. 198. 

314, 432, 472, 492, 493, xi. overplied, Son. xxii. 10. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



over-potent, S. A. 427* 
over-power, P. X. ii. 237* 
over-powerd, P. X. vi. 419, 

viii. 453 ; S. A. 880. 
over-praifing, P. X. ix. 6l5. 
over-reach, P. X. x. 879. 
over-reach'd, P. X. ix. 313 ; 

P. P. iv. 11. 
over-ripe, P. R. iii. 31. 
over-rul'd, P. X. iii. 114, v. 

527, vi. 228. 
over-run, P. P. iii. 72. 
over-thadow, P. X. xii. 187. 
over-fhadmving, P. X. vii. l65; 

P. P. iv. US. 
overfpread, P X. vi. 670 ; P/. 

lxxx. 42. 
over-ftrong, S.A. 1590. 
over-fure, P. P. ii. 142. 
overtake, Od. on Time, 13 ; P/*. 

vii. 14. 
overtafk, Cow. 309. 
overthrow, P. X. iv. 905, vi. 

372. 
overthrew, P. X. i. 135, vi. 

601 ; P. R. i. 115. 
overthrown, P. X. ii. 992, vi. 

856; S.A. 463, 169S ; £p. 

Sob/. I. 4. 
over-tir'd, 5. A. 1632. 
overtook, P. X. ii.792. 
over-trufting, P. X. ix. 1183. 
overture, P. X. vi. 562. 
overturn'd, P. X. vi. 390. 
overturns, P. X. vi. 463; S, A. 

542. 
over-watchM, <S. A. 405. 
overween, Sow. ix. 6. 
overweening, P. X. x, 878 ; 

P.P. i. 147. 
overwhelm, P. X. xii. 214. 
overwhelm'd, P. X. x. 159, xi. 

748.; S. A. 1559. 
over-woody, P. X. v. 213. 
ought. See aught. 
ought, (verb) P. X. viii. 74, 

x. 12 ; & A. 874. 
ought'ft, 5. .4. 329. 



ounce, P. X. vii. 466; Com. 71. 
ounces, P. X. iv. 344. 
ourfelves, P. X. ii. 225, 253, 

254, ix. 654, x. 999, 1002, 

1037, 1042. 
out, P.P. i. 334, ii. 29, l66 t 

iv. 130; S'./i. 33, 405, 539 9 

1103, Il60, 1326, 1569; 

Lye. 190 ; X'.4/. Ill; Com. 

83, 137, 182,606,630; Od. 

on Time, 1 ; Vac. Ex. 24 ; 

Ep.Hobf. II. 8; P/ vi. 11. 

lxxxi. 42. 
©ut, out, S.A. 748. 
out of, P. X. i. 10, 163, 165, 

710, ii. 758, vi. 137, 660, x. 

317, 843, 867, xii. 423; 

P. It. i. 81, 84, ii. 5$, iv. 

449; S. A. 880; P/ viii. 

4,5. 
out of order, P/. lxxxii. 20. 
out-caft, P. X. ii. 694, iv. 106; 

P. P. ii. 309. 
outcries, S.A. 1124. 
outcry, P. X. ii. 726, 737; 

5.^.1517. 
outdo, P. X. iii. 298. 
out-done, P. X. i. 696. 
out-flew, P. X. i. 663. 
out-go, Vac. Ex. 79» 
out-grew, P. X. ix. 202. 
outlandifh, P.P. iv. 125. 
out-lafted, Od. D.F.I. 3. 
outlaw's, Cow*. 399- 
out-live, P. X. xi. 538. 
out-living, Od. Raff. 7. 
outmoft, P. X.ii.1039. 
out-pour'd, P. P iii. 311 ; S. A, 

544. 
outrage, P. X. i, 500, x. 707. 
outrageous, P. X. ii. 435, vi. 

587, vii. 212, x. 232. 
outrageoufly, P/. lxxxiii. 6. 
outfhine, P. X. i. 86. 
outfhone, P. X. ii. 2. 
outfide, P. X. iii. 74, viii. 568, 

596, x. 317; P< #° iv* 
53, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



outfpread, P. L. i. 20, v. 649. 

vii. 235 ; Pf. vii. 17, lxxx. 6. 

outftretch'd, P. L. v. 88, x. 

851; Ep. Hoof. II. 17. 
outward, P. L. i. 97, iv. 120, 

viii. 221, 538, 543, 642, ix. 

312, 348, x. 220, xii. 95, 

100, 534 j P. R. iv. 145; 

S.^.l6o, 1025, 1368,1369; 

Com. 460 ; Son. xxii. 2. 
out-watch, II Pen/. 87. 
out-worn, S. A. 580; Pf. 

lxxxvii. 22. 
owp, P. L. ii. 856, iii. 181, iv. 

53, 444, v. 520, 521, vi. 468, 

vii. 76, ix. 807, 1141; P. R. 

ii. 325; S. ^. 1405; 5o». 

xvii. 12. 
owes, P. jL iv. 56. 
owing, P. i. iv. 56. 
owls, So/2, xii. 4. 
own, P. /I. iv. 340 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 6 ; Pf. vi. 20. 
own'd, P. P. ii. 85 ; 7/ Penf. 

113. 
owners, »Sf. A. 126l. 
owns, 6\ ^. 1157. 
ox, P. X. i. 486, viii. 396; 

Cow. 291. 
oxen, P. £. xi. 647. 
Oxus, P. X. xi. 389- 

P. 

pace, P. £. vi. 551, viii. 164, 
x. $59; S. A. 110, Co««. 145; 
870; Od.on Time, 3. 

pace lor pace, P. L. x. 589» 

paces, P. X. vi. 193. 

paces, (verb) P. L. viii. l65. 

pacifick, P. L. xi. 86'0. 

pack'd, Koc. Ex. 12. 

packing, Pore, of Can. 14. 

paft, P.P. iv. 191. 

Padan-aram, P. JL iii. 513. 

page, Son. xi. 6. 

pageantry, L'^//. 128. 

paid, P. X. i. 441, ii. 248, iii. 



107, 246, v. 145, xi. 452, 
xii. 293, 424; S. A. 432, 
1477, 1573. 
pain, P. L. i. 55, 125, 558, 
608, ii. 30, 34, 88, 147, 207, 
219, 261, 278, 46l, 544, 567, 
586, 608, 695 } 752, 783, 823, 

861, iv. 97, 271, 511, 888, 

892,910,915,918,919,921, 

925, 948, vi. 280, 327, 362, 

394, 397, 43 1, 454, 457, 462, 

657 ', 877, ix. 283, 487, 694, 

86l, x. 470, 501,775,964, 

1025, xi. 601, xii. 384; 

P.P. i. 401, iv. 305; S. A. 

617 ; Com.6$7- 
pain'd, P. L. vi. 404. 
painful, P. L. i. 562, iii. 452, 

xi. 528 ; S. A. 699< 
pains, P. L. i. 147, 336, x. 

1051, xi. 511; P.P. ii.401, 

iv. 479; $. A. 485, 501, 

576, 615. 
paint, P. 1m v. 187. 
painted, P. L. viii. 434 ; P. R. 

iv. 253; Pf. cxxxy'i. 18. 
paints, P. L. v. 24. 
pair, P. L. iv. S21, 366, 534, 

774, v. 227, 278, 280, viii, 

6()5,ix.l97,x. 342,585, xi. 

10, 105; Com. 236; Od. So!. 

Muf 1. 
pair'd, S. A. 208. 
pairs, P. 7i. vii. 459, viii. 58. 

394, xi. 7$r>. 
palace, P. X. v, 760, vii. 363, 

x. 308, xii. 177; P. P. ii. 

300, iv. 51; Com. 14; Orf. 

Nat. 148. 
palace-gate, P. i. iii. 305. 
palaces, P. L. i. 497, xi. 750; 

P. R. iv. 35 ; PA lxxxiii. 48, 
palate, P. L. ix. 1020. 
Palatine, P. P. iv. 50. 
pale, P. L.i. 183, 786, ii. 6l6, 

iii. 732, iv. 115, vi.393, ix. 

894, x. 590, 1009, xi. 446; 

Lye. 143; It Penf. 121; Com. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



. 333 ; Son. xxiii. 4 ; Od. Nat. 

185, 232; Od. May-M. 4; 

Pf. lxxxviii. 44. 
pale-ey'd, Od, Nat. 180. 
pales, P. X. ix. 393. 
Faleftine, P. X. i. 80, 465 ; 

S, A. 144, 1099. 
pall, IlPeJif.gS. 
pallet, Cow. 318. 
palm, P. X. iv. 139, vi. 885, 

ix. 435; S. A. 1735. 
palmer's, Cum. 189. 
palm-tree, P. X. viii. 212. 
palms, P. R. ii. 21 ; Cow. 918; 

Od. Sol, Muf. 14. 
palmy, P. X. iv. 254. 
palpable, P. X. ii. 406, xii. 188. 
pamper'd, P. X. v. 214. 
Pan, P. X. iv. 266, 707; P. P. 

ii. 190 ; Com. 176, 268; Od 

Nat. 89. 
Pan's, ^rc. 106. 
Pandemonium, P. X. i. 756, x. 

424. 
Pandora, P. X. iv. 714* 
Paneas, P. X. iii. 535. 
pangs, P. L. ii. 703, ix. 1001 ; 

S.A.66O; Od. Cir. 27; Ep. 

M. Win. 68. 
Panim, P. L. i. 765. See alfo 

Paynim. 
Panope, Lye. S9- 
panoply, P. X. vi. 527, 760. 
panfies, P. X. ix. 1040; Co???. 

851. 
panfy, Lye. 144. 
parables, S. A. 500. 
parade, P. X. iv. 780. 
Paradiie, P. X. iii. 354, 478, 

496, 527, 632, 733, iv. 132, 

143, 208, 241, 274, 282, 379, 

422, 542, 752, 991, v. 143, 

226, 275, 446, vii. 45, viii. 
171, 319, ix. 71, 406,476, 

619,796, x. 2, 17,326,398, 

484, 551, 585, 598, 742, xi. 
29, 48, 104, 123, 210, 259, 

269,342,378, 830, xii. 314, 



464, 586, 587y 642; P. R, 
i. 3, 52, ii. 141, iv. 604, 
608, 611, 613. 

Paradifes, P. X. v. 500. 

paradoxes, P. R. iv. 234. 

paragon'd, P. X. x. 426. 

parallax, P. R. iv. 40. 

parallel, P. X. v. 141. 

paramount, P. X. ii. 508. 

paramour, Od. Nat. 36. 

parafite, P. R. i. 452. 

paranymph, S. A. 1020. 

parch, P. X. xii. 636. 

parch'd, P. X. x. 556. 

parching, P. X. ii. 594>; Lye, 
13. 

pardon, P. X. iv. 80, v. 848, 
x. 1089, 1101, xi. 167; S.A, 
521, 738, 771, 814, 825, 
1 171 ; Vac. Ex. 7 ; Pf. lxxxvi. 
14. 

pardons, P. X. iii. 492. 

pards, P. X. iv. 344. 

parent, P. X. ii. 805, v. 153, 
x. 331, 354. 

parentage, P. R. i. 235. 

parents, P. X. i. 29, 393, 510, 
x. 904, xii. 638 ; S. A. 25, 
220, 886, 1487- 
firft parents, P. X.'iii. 65, 
iv. 6. 

pari, P. R. iv. 529. 

parle, P. X. vi. 296; 5. A. 785. 

parliament, <So?i. x. 5 ; Pore, o/' 
Co??. 15. 

parlies, S. A. 403. 

parly, Com. 241. 

parricide, S. A. 832. 

parfunonious, P. X. vii 485. 

part, P. X. i. 267, 367, 6*45, ii. 
325, 770, iii. 371, 584, iv. 
63, 411, 487, v. 83, vi. 345, 
413, 565, vii. 145, 359, viii. 
138, 139, 534, 56l, ix. 7, 8, 
375, 667, 673, S79, 1018, x. 
155, 817, 886, 951, 1031, 
xi. 430, 431, 564, 660, 7* 5, 
xii. 298, 533; P. ft. ii. 240, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

248, 478, iii. 399 1 S. A. 48, party, P. L. ii. 368. 

53, 394, 395, 745, 1217, pais, P. L. i. 352, ii. 438, 606, 

1229, 1453, 1463; Son. ix. 684, 776, 1031, iii. 480, 481, 

5;0d.Nat.l05. iv. 579, v. 453, 693, vii. 

part, (adj.) P. L. ii. 528, 531, 432, ix. 231, 452, 849, x. 

570, iii. 595, vi. 516, 519, 48, 1083; P. R. i. 322, ii. 

vii. 293, 403, 410, 425, xi. 233, iii. 151, iv. 209; Com. 

643, xii. 230, 231, 336. 79, 402, 539 J Od. Nat. 139 ; 

part, (verb) P. L. iv. 784, 872, Vac. Ex. 45, 72 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 

viii. 645, xi. 282; S. A. 21, lxxxviii. 13, exxxvi. 50. 

1056, 1229, 1481. pafs through, P. L. ii. 886. 

in part, P. L. ii. 380, iv. 670, paflage, P. L. iii. 528, iv. 232, 

*v. 405, ix. 1119, x. 716, x. 260, 304, 475, xi. 122, 

xi. 513; S.A. 72. 366; S. A. 6l0; Vac. Ex. 

moft part, P. R. iii. 232. 24. 

partake, P. L. ii. 3/4,, 466, v. paflkges, P. I. xi. 528. 

75, vi. 903, ix. 3, 199, 818, pafs'd, P. L. i. 395, 487, ii. 

xii. 598 ; S. A. 1455. 438, 619, 1017, iii. 498, 534, 

partaken, Com. 741. iv. 177, 225, 319, 321, 689, 

partakers, P. L. i v. 731. v. 31, 50, 291, 675 y 748, 

partakes, P. L. viii. 364. 754, 903, vi. 330, viii. 352, 

parted, P. L. iv. 302, viii. 652, ix. 1144, x. 227, 419, 443, 

ix. 848, 916, 1153, x. 380; xi. 16; P. R. i. 303, ii. 106, 

& A. 1447, 1719 J Com. 56 ; 245, iii. 439 ; Ariojt. 1 ; PA 

So?i. xiv. 1 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 17. lxxxi. 19* 

Parthenope's, Com. 879- pafs'd through, P. L. x. 2-33. 

Parthian, P. R. iii. 290, 294, pafled, P. R. iv. 426. 

362, 363, 369, iv. 73, 85. pafienger, Com. 39- 

partial, P. L. ii. 552. pafics, P. L. viii. 173; Lye. 21 ; 

participate, P. L. v. 494, viii. <SW. ix. 13. 

390. pafling, P. L. viii. 290, x. 714, 

participating, P. £. ix. 717; xi. 717, xii. 130; P. R. ii. 

S.A. 1507. 155, iii. 436; 6'.^. 1458; 

particular, S. A. 1595. Fee. £.r. 40. 

parting, P. L. iv. 1003, v. 252, palling back, P. L. x. 252. 

viii. 630, ix. 276, xii. 59o ; paifion, P. L. i. 605, ii. 564, 

Od. Nat. 186. iv. 114, viii. 530, 585, 588, 

partition, P. L. vii. 267, viii. 635, ix. 98, 667, x. 627, 718, 

105. 865 ; S. A. 1006, 1758 ; 

partly, P. R. i. 262. 11 Pcnf. 41 . 

partner, P. L. iv. 411, x. 128. paftions, P. L. i. 454, iv. 571, 

partners, S.A. 810. ix. 1123, xii. 88; P. R. ii. 

partook, P. A. ii. 277. 4()"7, 472, iv. 266. 

parts, P. L. i. 194, iii. 593, iv. paflive, P. L. iii. 110, vi. 72. 

312, vi. 354, vii. 465, ix. paft, P. L. i. 628, ii. 1023, iii. 

1093, 1097, S. A. 96; Com. 62, 78, 227, 328, iv. 160, 

7 2. 762, 932, v. 33, 113, 554, 

parts, (verb) P.I. i.420,ii. 660. 582, vi. 684, 699, 895, vii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



253, ix. 628, 926, x. 341, 

840, xi. 158, 600, 776, xii. 

14, 604; P. R. i. 300, iii. 

155, 294, iv. 342 ; S. A. 22, 

120, 685, 811, 912, 1064; 

Lye. 132; Com. 302; Pf. 

cxiv. 3. 
paitime, P. X. viii. 375. 
paftimes, Com. 121. 
paftoral, P. X. xi. 132 ; Com. 

345. 
paltry, P. H. ii. 343. 
pafture, P. X. iv. 351, vii. 404. 
paftur'd, P. X. xi. 653. 
pasturing, P. X. vii. 462, ix. 

nop. 

paftures, P. H. iii. 260 ; Lye. 

193. 
paternal, P.L, vi. 750, vii. 219, 

xi. 353, xii. 24. 
path, P. L. ii. 976, iv. 177, vi. 

173, x. 256, xi. 371 ; P<R. 

i. 322 ; Com, 303. 
pathlefs, P.R, i. 296; IlPenf. 

70. 
paths, P. X. ix. 244, xi. 631, 

814; Com. 37, 569. 
patience, P. X. ii. 569, vi. 464, 

ix.32,xi. 36l, xii. 583; P. R. 

i. 426, ii- 102, iii. 92, 93; 

5.^.654,755, 1287,1296; 

Com. 971 ; Son. xix. 8 ; 0</. 

D.P.J. 75. 
patient, P. J?, iii. 95, iv. 420; 

S. A. 1623. 
patiently, P. X. xi. 112, 287, 

551; P. #.ii. 432. 
patriarch, P. X. v. 506, ix. 376, 

xii. 117, 151. 
patriarchs, P. L, iv, 762. 
patrimony, P. L. x. 818 ; P. R> 

iii. 428 ; 5. A. 1482. 
patron, P. X. iii. 219, iv. 958. 
patronefs, P. X. ix. 21 ; Od. 

Pajr.29. 
patrons, P. L. xi. 696. 
pattern, P. X. vii. 487. 
pav'd, P. X. ii. 1026, x. 473. 



pavement, P. X. i. 682, 726, iii. 
363, vii. 578. 

pavilion, P. X. ii. 960. 

pavilion'd, P. X. xi. 215. 

pavilions, P. X. v. 653 ; Pf. iii. ~. 
18. 

Paul, Pore. 0/ Con. 10. 

pa ufe, P. X. iii. 56 1, v. 562, vi* 
162 ; Son, xxi. 7. 

paus'd, P. X. v. 64, xii. 2, 466* 

paufing, P. X. ix. 744. 

paw, P. X. iv. 343, 408 ; Lye* 
128 ; Son, xvi. 13. 

pawing, P. X. vii. 464. 

pay, P. X. iii. 211, iv, 47, viii. 
344, x. 1026, xi. 36; P.R. 
ii. 375, iv. 80; S. A, 489, 
1204. 

paying, P. X. iv. 53 ; S. A. 432. 

Paynim, P. R. iii. 343. 

pays, P. X. iv. 56. 

peace, P. L. i. 65, 660, ii. 227, 
228, 292, 329, 331, 332, 335, 
499, 690, iii. 263, 274, iv. 
104, v. 210, vi. 267, 560, 617, 
vii. 55, 183, 2l6, ix. 333,98] , 
1126, x. 135, 908, 913, 924, 
938, xi.38, 117, 153, 507, 
580, 667, 781, 784,796, 815, 
867, xii. 23, 296, 317, 355, 
550, 558 ; P. R. iii. 80, 91, 
iv. 425 ; S.A. 60, 966, 1049, 
1070, 1073, 1074, 1334,1445, 
1757; Lye. 22; L'Ah 120; 
11 Pen/. 45 ; Com. 359, 368 ; 
Son. xvi. 4, 10, xvii. 5, 14; 
Od. Nat. 7, 46, 52, 63 ; Od. 
on Time, \6 ; Ep.M. Win. 48 % 
Vac. Ex. 84, ; Eurip. 4 ; Pf, 
iv. 22, 37, vii. 10, lxxxiii. 2, 
lxxxv. 13, 31, 33, 43. 
peaceable, P. JR. iii. 76. 
peaceful, P. X. ii. 227, 279* *« 
946, xi. 600 ; S.A. 709 ; 11 
Pen/. 168 ; Od. Nat. 6l. 
peal, P. X. ii. 656, iii. 329; 

S. A. 235. 
peal'd, P, X. ii. 920, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



pealing, II Pen/. l6l. 

peals, S. A. 906. 

pearl, P. X. ii. 4, iii. 519, iv. 

238, v. 2,634; P. it.iv. 120; 

Sow. xii. 8. • 
pearled, Com. 834. 
pearls, Ep. M. Win. A3. 
pearly, P. X- v. 430, vii. 407. 
peafant, P. X. i. 783. 
pebbles, P. E. iv. 330. 
peccant, P. X. xi. 70. 
peculiar, P. X. iii. 183, v. 15, 

vii. 368, xii. Ill; P. R. i. 

402, 
peeling, P. it. iv. 136. 
peep, Com. 140. 
peer, Lye. 9; Com. 31. 
peerage, P. X. i. 586. 
peering, Od. JV<zr\ 140. 
peerlefs, P. X. iv. 608 ; Arc. 75. 
peers, P. X. i. 39, 6l8, 757, ii. 

119,445, 507, v. 812, vi. 127, 

x. 456; P. R. i. 40, iii. 343. 
Pegafean, P. X. vii. 4. 
Pekin, P. X. xi. 390. 
Pellean, P. ii. ii. 196. 
Pelleas, P. it. ii. 36 1. 
Pellenore, P.R. ii. 36l. 
Pelops, 1/ Pew/. 99- 
Pelorus, P. X. i. 232. 
pen, P. X. iv. 185. 
penal, P. X. i. 48; £. ^. 508. 
penalty, P. L. vii. 545, ix. 775, 

x. 15, 753, 1022, xi. 197, 

xii. 398, 399. 
penance, P. X. ii. 92, x. 550 ; 

S. A. 738. 
pencil, P. X. iii. 509. 
pendant, P. L. i. 727, ii- 1052, 

iv. 239, x. 313. 
pendulous, P. X. iv. 1000. 
penetration, P. X. iii. 585. 
penitent, P. X. x. 1097, xii. 

319; P. ii- iii. 421; .$'. A. 

502,754,761. 
penn'd, CW. 344. 
pennons, P. L. ii. 933, vii. 441. 
pens, P. X. vii. 421. 



penfioner, II Pen/. 10. 
penfive, P. X. ii. 777, iv. 173, 

viii. 287 ; U Pen/. 31 ; Com, 

387; Od.PaJIM. 
pent, P. X. vi. 657, ix. 445 ; 

S.A. 1647; Cow. 499; Pf- 

lxxxviii. 36. 
Pentateuch, P. it. iv. 226. 
Penuel, S.^. 278. 
penurious, Com. 726. 
people, P. X. x. 27, xii. 171, 

181, 309, 483; P. R. ii. 48, 

iii.49,iv. 102, 132; S.A. 12, 

317,1158,1421,1473,1533, 

1601, 1620; II Pen/. 8; Brut. 

10; Pf. iii. 24, lxxxi, 33, 45, 

53, 63, lxxxiii. 9, lxxxv. 6, 

23, 31, exxxvi. 57. 
peopled, P. X. x. 889. 
people's, P. R. iii. 48 ; 5. A. 

681 ; P/lxxx. 20. 
Peor, P. X.i. 412; Od.iV 7 ^. 197. 
Peraea, P. it. ii. 24. 
perceive, P. X. i. 335, iii. 404, 

vi. 623, vi. 623, ix. 598, xii, 

8 ; Com. 74, 563. 
perceiv'd, S. A. 1201. 
perceived, P. X. ii. 299, v i- 19. 
perceiving, P. X. viii. 41; P. it, 

I. 227 ; S. A. 397. 
perceiv'ft, P. X. viii. 566. 
perched, S. A. 1693. 
perdition, P. X. i. 47; Orf. JX 

P.J. 67; iy: lxxxviii. 47. 
perfect, P. X. i. 550, ii. 764, iv. 
577, 634, v. 399, 442, 524, 
568, vi. 71, 462, vii. 455, viii. 
415, 642, ix. 1179, x. 138, 
xi. 876; P.P. i. 83, 166, iii. 

II, iv. 302, 468; Lye. 82; 
Com. 73, 203 ; Od. Nat. 166 ; 
OdPqf. 13; Od. Sol. Muf. 
23 ; Ep. M. Win. 55. 
more perfect, P. X. ix. 689. 

perfect, (verb) P. X. xi. 36. 
perfection, P.L. iv. 673, v. 29, 

472, ix. 964, x. 150, 483; 

P. R. i. 209, iii. 230. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



perfections, P. X. v. 353, ix. 

1031 ; P. R. ii. 138. 
perfeaiy, P.X. ix. 707 ; Od.on 

Time, 15. 
perfidious, P.X, i.308, v. 880} 

Lye. 100. 
perform, P. X. i. 699, iv. 418, 

vii. 164, x. 750, xii. 299 > 

Od. D. F. I. 70. 
performance, P. X. x. 502. 
perform'd, P. X. vi. 695, xi. 

440, xii. 505; P. H. ii. 49; 

£.u4. 1083, 1218, 1626, 1641. 
performing, P. X. xi. 300, xii. 

299. 

performs, P. X. ii. 595, 

perfume, 5. ^f. 720. 

perfumes, P. X. iv. 158; Com. 
556. 

perhaps, P. X. i. 166, 176, 655, 
ii. 70, 178, 211, 362, 394, 
572, 835, 911, Hi. 588, 700, 
iv. 112, 360, 791, 993, v. 
3*2,401,496, 569, vi. 438, 
460, 616, vii. 85, 487, 621, 
viii. 77, 148, 152, 205, 536, 
ix. 139, 247, 263, 381, 532, 
610,713,811,813,823,928, 
1148, 1 177, x. 253,582,923, 
xi. 74, 75, 226, 343, 406, xii. 
4; P.R. ii. 452, iii. 430, iv. 
116; S. A. 112, 113, 508, 
697, 812, 976, 1077, 1300, 
1347,1412, 1414; Lye. 157; 
L'Al.79;Com. 229,285, 353; 
Son. vii. 5 ; Od. Nat. 91. 

peril, P. X. iii. 544, ix. 922, x. 
469; Com. 40. 

perilous, P. X. i. 276, ii. 420 ; 
S. A. 804 ; Lye. 185 ; Com. 
424. 

period, P. X. xii. 467 ; Com. 
585. 

periods, P. X. ii, 603. 

Peripateticks, P. ii. iv. 279. 

perifh, P. X. i. 132, ii 149, iii. 
287, x. 785; S.A.676$ P/. 
ji« 26, ]xxx. 67. 



periuYd, -S. ^. 1512. 
permiflion, P. X. i. 212, ix. 

378; P.R. i. 496, iv. 175. 
permiffive, P. X. iii. 685, viii. 

435, x. 451. 
permit, P. L. ix. 885, 1159, xi. 

554 ; P. H. i. 483 ; II Pen/. 

77* 
permits, P. L. iv. 1009, xi. 260, 

xii. 90. 
permitted, P. L. vi. 674, x. 

574; P. ii. iv. 183; S. A. 

1159, 1495. 
permitting, P. X. ix. 4. 
pernicious, P. X. i. 282, vi. 

520, 849, ix. 981 ; S.A. 1400* 
perpetual, P. X. i. 131, ii. 103 f 

588, 86l, iv. 760, v. 182, vi. 

6, 693, vii. 306, x. 679, xi. 

108 ; Com. 479 ', Od. Nat. 7. 
perpetuity, P. L. x. 813. 
perplex, P. X. ii. 114, x. $79» 
perplex'd, P. L. ii. 525, iv. 176, 

ix. 19, xii. 275 ;P.il. iv. 1; 

Com. 37. 
perplexes, P. L. i. 599» 
perplexing, P. X. viii. 183. 
perplexities, S. A. 304. 
perplexity, P. ii. ii. 38. 
perfecution, P. L. xii. 531. 
perfecutors, P. X. xii. 497. 
Perfepolis, P. il. iii. 284. 
perfeverance, P. il. i. 148. 
perfevere, P. X. v. 525, vii. 632, 

xii. 532. 
perfevering, P. X. viii. 639* 
Persian, P. X. xi. 393 ; P. & 

iii. 273. 
perfifted, P. X. x. 874; S. A, 

249. 
perfifting, P.X, iii. 197, ix. 377* 
perfon, P. X. ii. 110, ix. 41, 

444, x. 156; S. A. 31, 851, 

1208, 1211 ; Com. 406; Son. 

xxiii. 11. 
perfonating, P. R. iv. 341. 
perfons, P. R. ii. 240. 
perfuade, P. X. ii. 121, ix, 979 ; 



VERBAL INDEX, 



P.R. iii. 44; S. A. 5$6, 

1495 ; Od. D. F. I. 29. 
perfuaders, P. X. ix. 587. 
perfuafion, P. X. xi. 1 52 ; P. JR. 

i.223, ii. 142, iv.230;6'.^/. 

658. 
perfuafrve, P. X. ii. 118, ix. 

737 ; P. #• iv. 4. 
perfuafively, P. X. ix. 8/3. 
pert, Com. 118. 
perturbation, P. X. iv. 120, x. 

113. 
Peru, P. X. xi. 408. 
perfevere, P. X. ii. 625, 1030, 

vi. 37, 562, 706, ix. 405, xi. 

701 ; S. A. 737. 
pervcrfenefs, P. X. vi. 788, x. 

902. 
pervert, P. X. i. 164, iii. 92, 

xi. 523 ; Pf. lxxxii. 5. 
perverted, P. X. x. 3, xii. 547. 
perverts, P. X. iv. 203. 
perus'd, P. X. viii. 267 ; P. -R. 

i. 320. 
peft, P. X. ii. 735. 
pefter'd, Com. 7. 
peiiilence, P. X. ii. 71 1, xi. 487 ; 

P. H. iii. 412; Od. D.F.I. 

68. 
peftilent, P. X. x. 695. 
pet, Cow?. 721. 
Peter, P. X. iii. 484. 
petition, P. X. xi. 10 ; S. ^. 

650. 
petrifick, P.X. x. 294, 
petty, P. X. ix. 693 ; P. R. iv. 

87; S.X 1223; Com. 926. 
Petzora, P. X. x. 292. 
phalanx, P. X. l. 550, iv. 979, 

vi. 399- 
phantaim, P. X. ii. 743. 
phantafms, P. X. iv. 803. 
phantafy, Od. Sol. Muf. 5. 
Pharaoh, P. X. i. 342, xii. 163; 

Pf. cxxxvi. 41. 
Pharian, Pf. cxiv. 3. 
Pharphar, P. X. i. 469. 
Philip, P.it. iii. 32. 



Philiftean, P. X. ix. 106l. 
Philiftia, Pf. lxxxvii. 14. 
Philiitian, S. A. 39, 42, 2l6„ 

482, 722, 831, 1371, 1655, 

1714. 
Philiftine, S.A. 238, IO99. 
Philiftines, S. A. 251,434, 577 , 

1189, 1192, 1363, 1523; Pf 

lxxxiii. 27. 
Philiflines', S. A. 803. 
Phillis, UAL 86. 
Philomel, II Petif 56. 
philofophers, P. X. iii. 601. 
philofophick, P. R. iv. 300. 
philofophy, P. X. ii. 565 ; P. i?. 

iv. 272 ; Com. 476. 
Phineus, P.X. iii. 36. 
Phlegethon, P. X. ii. 580. 
Phlegra, P. X. i. 577- 
Phoebus, P. R. iv. 260 ; Xyc. 

77 ; Com. 66, 190 ; Sow. xiii. 

10; CW. Pqf.23. 
Phoenicians. P. X. i. 438. 
phoenix, P. X. v. 272. 
phrenzy, P. X. xi. 485 ; S. A. 

1675. 
phylacleries, Pore, of Con. 17* 
pick, S.^. 1326. 
pickax, P. X. i. 676. 
piclure, Od. Hor. 14. 
pide, UAL 75. 
pieces, P. X. vi. 489 ; P. R- iv. 

149. 
Piemontefe, Son. xviii. 7. 
pierce, P.H. ii. 91 ; S. A. 1568 ; 

UAL 138 ; Od. CYr. 28 ; Od. 

Sol. Muf. 4. 
piere'd, P. X. iv. 99, vi. 356, 

435, xi.417. 
piercing, P. X. ii. 275, iii. 24. 
piety, P. X. vi. 144, xi. 452, 

799, xii. 321; S.A. 993. 
pilafters, P. X. i. 713. 
pile, P.X.i.722, ii.591;P.#. 

iv. 547 ; S. A. IO69. 
pile, (verb) P. X. xi. 324. 
piled, Vac. Ex. 42; Ep. JV. 

Sk. 2, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



pll'd, P. L. i v. 544, v. 394, 632 ; 

P.R. ii. 341. 
pilfering, Com. 504. 
pilgrim, P. R. iv. 427. 
pilgrims, P. L. iii. 476. 
pillar, P. L. ii. 302, xii. 202, 

203, 208. 
pillar'd, P. £. ix. 1106; P. H. 

iv.455; Com. 598. 
pillars, P. £. i. 714, iv, 549, 
vi. 572, 573 ; P. R. iv. 58 ; 
S. A. 1606, 1630, 1633, 1648 ; 
II Pen/. 158. 
pillows, Od. Nat. 231. 
pilot, P. L. i. 204, v. 264 ; S. A. 

198, 1044 ; Lye. 109. 
pinch'd, UAL 103. 
pinching, P. L x. 691. 
Pindarus, Sow. viii. 11. 
pine, P. L. i. 292, iv. 139, «. 
435, x. 1076 ; II Penf. 135. 
pine, (verb) P. L. ii. 601, x. 
597, xii. 77 ; P/. Ixxxvi. 3. 
pin'd, P. L. iv. 466, 848 ; P.R. 

i. 325. 
pines, P. L. i. 6l3, ii. 544, v. 
193, vi. 198, ix. 1088, xi. 
321; P. R. iv. 416; Com. 
184. 
pines, (verb) P. L. iv. 511; 

Com. 768. 
pinfold, Co?tj. 7. 
pining, P. L. xi. 486. 
pink, Lye. 144. 
pinks, Com. 851. 
pinnace, P. L. ii. 289. 
pinnacle, P. P. iv. 549. 
pinnacles, P. L. iii. 550. 
pins, P. £. x. 318. 
pioneers, P. L. i. 676 ; P.P. iii. 

230. 
pious, P. L. v. 135, xi. 362 ; 

P. R. i. 463 ; S. A. 955. 
pipe, P. JL vii. 595, xi. 132 ; 
P. P. i. 480 ; Com. 86, 173. 
pip'd, Cow. 823. 
piping, II Penf. 126. 
pipes, P.I. i. 561, 709 i P. £» 



ii. 363; 5.^. I6l6; Lye. 
124. 
pit, P. L. i. 91, 381, 657, ii. 
850, iv.965, vi. 866, x.464; 
Pf. vii. 55, 56, lxxxviii. 14, 
25. 
pitch, P. L. ii. 772, viii. 198, 
xi. 693, 73l;S.A.l69;Pf. 
iii. 18. 
pitch'd, P. L. xii. 136. 
piteous, P. L. x. 1032 ; Com, 

836 ; P/I exxxvi. 78. 
pitied, 5. ^. 568. 
pity, P. L. iii. 402, 405, v. 220, 
x. 25, 1061, xi. 629 ; S. A. 
814 ; Son. ix. 8 ; Od. D. F. I. 
33. 
pity, (verb) P. L. iv. 374; P/ 

iv. 6, vi. 3, Ixxxvi. 9. 
pitying, P. L. x. 211, 1059. 
placable, P.L. xi. 151. 
place, P. X. i. 70, 75, 253, 254, 
318, 625, 759, ii. 27, 217, 
235, 260, 317, 345, 360, 830, 
832, 840, 894, 977, iii. 442, 
591, 720, 724, iv. 23, 79, 246, 
385, 562, 690, 729, 745, 759y 
840, 843, 882, 891, 894, v. 
361, 373, 614, 682, 732, 812, 
vi. 53, 176, 405, 782, vii. 
135, 144, 240, 284, 535, ix. 
69, 119, 444, 1174, x. 148, 
241,315,624,741,787,932, 
953,971, 1086,1 098, xi. 267, 
303,318,477,635, 831,836, 
xii. 142, 363, 364, 464, 647 5 
P. R. i. 252, 321, 412, 416, 
ii, 125,396, iv. 101, 373,600; 
S.A. 17,254,333,910, 1085, 
1117, 1624, 1751 ; II Penf. 
78; Arc. 105; Com. 156, 
201, 305, 326, 570, 939 ; Od. 
D.F.I. 46; Vac. Ex. 25; 
Pf. lxxx. 37. 
place, (verb) P. L. iii. 194, x, 

745, xi. 118. 
plac'd, P. L. i. 387, ii. 833, iii. 
66 7 90, iv. 294, 416, 580, v. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



4,76, 516, vi. 412, 638, vii. 

360, viii. 120, 170, 559, 638, 

x. 447, 484, xii. 315 ; P. R. 

i. 475, ii. 424, iv. 297, 553 ; 

Dante II. 3 ; Pf lxxxvii. 4. 
places, P. L. v. 364, x. 324, xi. 

305, xii. 516, 618. 
placid, P. R. iii. 217. 
plague, P. L. ii. 174, vi. 505. 
plagu'd, P. L. x. 572. 
plagues, P. L. vi. 838, xi. 697. 
plain, P. X. i. 180, 350, 397, 

700, ii. 528, iii. 466, iv. 243, 

455, v. 648, 649, vi. 15, vii. 

299, viii. 303, ix. 285, 758, 

xi. 349, 556, 576, 580, 649, 

673, xii. 41, 136, 640 ; P. R. 

ii. 27, 87, iii. 254, 332, iv. 

27, 193, 296, 543 ; S. A. 

1256, 1279 ; Od. Hor. 5 ; Pf. 

lxxxiii. 40, cxxxvi. 22. 
plain'd, P. X. iv. 504. 
plaining, Od. PaJJ. 47. 
plaineft, P. R iv. 36l. 
plainlier, P. X. xii. 151. 
plains, P. X. i. 104, iii. 437, v. 

143, viii. 262, 275, ix. 116, 

x. 432; P. H. iii. 319; Com. 

823. 
plaint, P. X. x. 343, 91^, xi. 

499,762; Od.Nat. 191. 
plaints, P. X. ix. 98 ; P. R. ii. 

29, 58 ; Od. D. F. I. 37. 
planet, P. X. vii. 366, viii. 129 ; 

II Pen/. 96 ; Arc. 52. 
planet-ftruck, P. X. x. 413. 
planetary, P. X. x. 658. 
planets, P. L. iii. 481, v. 621, 

vi. 313, vii. 563, x. 413. 
plank, P. X. i. 77^. 
plant, P. X. iv. 199,240, v. 58, 

194, 327, vi. 475, vii. 335, ix. 

Ill, 206, 679, 837; P. H.iv. 

434 ; S. A. 362 ; Lye. 78 ; 

Cow. 621. 
plant, (verb) P. X. i. 652, iii. 

53 \S. A. 1734 ; Pf. lxxx. 36*. 
plantation, P. L. ix. 419. 



planted, P.L. iv. 210, 424, 884, 

vii. 538, viii. 305; Pf. i. 7, 

lxxx. 62. 
planter, P. X. iv. 691. 
plants, P. L. iv. 438, v. 22, vii. 

473; Arc. 48. 
plat, P. X. ix. 456 ; II Penf. 7$. 
platan, P. L. iv. 478. 
plate, P. X. vi. 368. 
plated, S. A. 140. 
Plato, J/ Penf 89. 
Plato's, P.L. iii. 472; P. H.iv. 

245. 
plaufible, P. it. iii. 393. 
play, P. L. iv. 404, ix. 528, 583, 

1045; P. 2*. i. 201; S. A. 

719, 1679; Com. 958. 
play, (verb) P. L. vii. 10, 410, 

viii. 372, ix. 1027 ; P. R- ». 

26;S.A. 1340, 1448; L\<4/. 

97 ; Coot. 301. 
play'd, P. X. ii. 641, iv. 340, 

v. 295, ix. 1048; Lye. 99- 
playing, £$c. 52. 
plea, P. L. iv. 394, x. 30 ; P. it. 

iii. 149 ; S. A. 834, 843 ; 

Lye. 90. 
plead, P. X. xi. 41 ; S. A. 421, 

833. 
pleaded, P. L. ii.379, viii. 510. 
pleafant, P. L. i. 404, iii. 703, 

iv. 28, 214, 625, 642, v. 38, 

84, 445, vi. 628, vii.3l6, 540, 

625, viii. 215, 306, ix. 207, 

448, xi. 179, 607; P.R.i. 

118, ii. 289, i»- 255; Od. 

Hor. 2 ; Pf lxxxiv. 3. 

more pleafant, P. L. iv. 215, 
v. 42, ix. 418. 
pleafanteft, P. L. viii. 212. 
pleafe, P. L. i. 423, ii. 270, iv. 

378, 640, v. 304, 397, vi. 351, 

vii. 49, viii. 449, ix. 9*9 i 

P.R.iv. 1 57, 164; 5.^4.896; 

LAI. 107 ; Com. 7 l*i Son. 

viii. 3. 
pleas'd, P. L. ii. 117, 291, 387, 

762, 845, iii. 257, iv. l67, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



463, 464, 604, v. 825, vii. 11, 

viii. 57, 248, 429, 437, **• 26, 

580, x. 105; P. K. i. 85, 286, 

ii. 395, iv. 337; S. A. 219, 

511, 900. 
pleafes, P. X. viii. 169, ix. 453 1 ; 

P.R. iv. 369; 5.^.311. 
pleafing, P. X. ii. 566, ix. 453, 

503; P.R. i. 479; S. A. 

1008 ; CW*. 260, 526, 546. 

more pleafing, P. X. xi. 26. 
pleafingly, P. X. ix. 794. 
pleafure, P. X. ii. 586, iii. 107, 

vi. 459, 641, viii. 50, 402, 

593, ix. 455, 470, 477, 596, 

1022, 1024, x. 1013, 1019, 

xi. 541, 604, 794; P.R. i. 

423, iv. 299,305 ;S.A. 534; 

II Pen/. 50; Com. 77 ; 0</. 

Nat. 99; Vac. Ex. 17 '. 
pleafures, P. X. iv. 535, viii. 

480, ix. 120 ; P. it. iii. 28 ; 

UAL 40, 69 ; II Pen/. 175 ; 

Com. 668. 
plebeian, P. X. x. 442. 
pledge, P. L. i. 274, ii. 818, iii. 

95, iv. 200, v. 168, viii. 325 ; 

S. A. 378, 535, 1144; Lye. 

107. 
pledges, Od. Sol. Muf 1 
Pleiades, P. X. vii. 374. 
plenipotent, P. -L. x. 404. 
plenteous, P. X. vi. 263, x. 600, 

xii. 18; Pf. iv. 32. 
plenteoufly, P. X. vii. 392. 
plenty, P. X. viii. 94, ix. 594 ; 

Com. 7 IS; Pf. lxxxv. 51. 
plies, P. X. ii. 954. 
plight, P. X. i. 335, vi. 607., ix 

1091, x. 937, xi.l;S. ,4.480, 

1729 ; IlPenf. 57; Com. 372 ; 

Od. Pqf 13. 
plighted, Com. 301. 
plots, P. X. ii. 193 ; Fore, of 

Con. 14 ; Pf ii. 4, lxxxiii. 10. 
plotting, P. X. ii. 338, v. 240, 

vi. 901. 
plough'd, Son, xvi. 4. 



plowman, P. X. iv. 983 ; L*Al. 

63. 
pluck, P. X. v. 327, viii. 309, 

ix. 595 ; Lye. 3 ; Pf. lxxx. 

51. 
pluck'd, P. X. v. 65, 84, vi. 

644, ix. 781, x. 560, xi. 537 ; 

Ep. M. Win. 38. 
plucking, Com. 296. 
plumb-down, P. X. ii. 933. 
plume, P. X. iii. 642, vi. l6l, 

xi. 186. 
plum'd, P. X. iv. 989. 
plumes, P. X. v. 286, vii. 432; 

P. JR. ii. 222; Cow. 378, 730. 
plummets, Od. on Time, 3. 
plumy, P. jR. iv. 583. 
plunge, P. X. ii. 172. 
plung'd, P. X. ii. 441, x. 476, 

844. 
plurality, Fore, of Con. 3. 
Pluto, L'AL 149. 
Plutonian, P. X. x. 444. 
Pluto's, II Penf. 107. 
ply, P. X. ii. 642, ix.201 ; Com. 

750. 
poem, P. X. ix. 41 ; P. U. iv. 

260, 332. 
poet, Son. viii. 13. 
poets, L'Al 129; Cow. 515. 
point, P. X. iii. 557, iv. 559, 

590, 862, v. 855; S.^.1514; 

Cow. 306. 
point, (verb) P. X iii. 733, xii. 

143; P. J?, iv. 463. 
pointed, Son. xiv. 7. 
pointed at, P. it. ii. 51 
pointing, P. X. i. 223. 
points, P. X. v. 823 ; P. it. iv. 

219. 
poife, P. X. ii. 905; Com. 410. 
pois'd, P. X. v. 579. 
poifon, Com. 47, 526. 
poifonous, S. A. 763 
polar, P. X. v. 269, x. 289,681. 
pole, P. X. i. 74, ii. 642, iii. 

560, iv. 724, vii. 23, 215, ix. 

66 ; Com. 99 i 0d. PaJ. 30, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



poles, P. L, x. 669 ; Vac. Ex. 34. 
policy, P. X, ii. 297 ; P. A. Hi. 

391. 
polifh, P. X. xi. 610. 
polifh'd, Od. Nat. 241. 
politician, S.A. 1195. 
politick, P. it. iii. 400. 
pollute, Od. Nat. 41. 
polluted, P. X. x. l67, xii. 110. 
polluting, P. X. x. 631. 
pollution, P. X. xii. 355. 
Pomona. P. X. ix. 393, 394. 
Pomona's, P. X. v. 378. 
pomp, P.L. i. 372, ii. 257, 

510, v.354, vii. 564, viii. 6l, 

xi. 748 ; P. it. i. 457, iii. 

246 ; S. A. 357, 436, 449, 

1312; L'Al. l27iEjf.JV.Sh. 

15. 
Pompey, P. it. iii. 35. 
pompous, P. it. ii. 390. 
pond, P. X. ix. 641. 
ponder, P. X. xii. 147. 
pondering, P. X. ii. 421, 919, 

vi. 127; P. it. ii- 105. 
ponders, P. X. iv. 1001. 
ponderous, P.L. i. 284. 
ponent, P. X. x. 704. 
Pontick, P. R. iii. 36. 
pontifical, P. X. x. 313. 
pontifice, P. X. x. 348. 
Pontus, P. X. v. 340, ix. 77 ; 

P. it. ii. 347. 
pool, P. X. i. 221, 266, 411, iii. 

14, ix. 77, 641 ; P.R.ix.79- 
poor, P. X. xii. 133 ; P. it. i. 

411,ii. 447; 5.^.366; Com. 

566; Orf.Pa//: 17 ; Pf. lxxxii. 

10, 13, lxxxvi. 3. 
pooreft, 5.^. 1479- 
pope, Dante I. 3. 
poplar, Orf. JNTaf. 185. 
popular, P. L. ii. 313, vii. 488, 

xii. 338; P. it. ii.227; S.^. 

16, 434. 
populous, P. L. i. 351, 770, ii. 

903, vii. 146, ix, 445,; P/ 

iii. l6. 



porch, P. X. i. 454 ; Com. 8S& 
porches, P. X. i. 762; P.R. ir, 

36. 
porcupines, £. A. 1138. 
por'd, Sow. xi. 4. 
pore, S. A. 97. 
porous, P. X. iv. 228, vii. 36l„ 
port, P. X. ii. 1044, iv. 778, 

869, xi. 8, 397 ; Com. 297. 
portal, P. X. iii. 508; Vac. 

Ex.5. 
portals, P. X. vii. 575. 
portcullis, P. X. ii. 874. 
ported, P. X. iv. 980. 
portend, P. it. iv. 389 ; S. A. 

590 ; Son. i. 7. 
portending, P. X. vi. 578, xii. 

596. 
portends, P. X. xi. 600. 
portentous, P. X. ii. 761, x. 

371. 
portents, P. it. i. 395, iv. 491, 
portion, P. L. i. 72, ii. 33. 
portraiture, II Pen f. 149. 
portray 'd, P. X. vi. 84. 
portreis, P. X. ii. 746. 
poflefs, P. X. ii. 365, iii. 243, 

iv. 431, v. 366, 688, vii. 431, 

viii. 340, x. 466, 623, xi. 

339, xii. 586; IlPenf. 6; 

Son. x. 14; Pf. lxxxii. 28. 
pofiefs'd, P.L. v. 790, viii. 404, 

ix. 1137; P. it. i. 49, iiu 

357; S.A. 266, 1005. 
poffeffes, P. X. ii. 729, 979, ix. 

251. 
pofieffing, P. X. ix. 189; P. it. 

iv. 302. 
pofiefiion, P.L. iv. 666, 941, x. 

46l, xi. 103, 222 ; P. it. iii. 

156, iv. 628 ; S. A. 869 ; P/. 

ii. 17. 
pofleflbur, P. X. i. 252. 
pollible, P. X. v. 441, ix. 359. 

if poflible, S. A. 490, 771. 
poflibly, P. X. v. 515. 
poft,P. X. iv. 171, S, A. 147; 

Od, D. F. I. 59. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



posterity, P. L. iii. 209, vii. 638, 
x. 818; S. A. 977. 

pofture, P. L. i. 322, iv, $76, 
vi. 605. 

potable, P. L. iii. 608. 

potent, P.L. i. 95, 338, ii 318, 
836, iv. 673, vi. 135, vii. 
100, xii. 211; Com. 255. 

potentate, P. L. v. 706, xi. 
231. 

potentates, P. L. i. 3l6; v. 749, 
vi. 416, vii. 19s ; P. R. u 
117, ii. 118. 

potion, Com. 68. 

pots, Pf. lxxxi. 23. 

potter's, P. L. ii. 21. 

poverty, P. R. ii. 415, 438, 
451; S.J. 697; Dante II. 1. 

pour, P. L. v. 314, xi. 825; 
Com. 710. 

pour down, P. L. vi. 544. 

pour forth, P. L. i. 770. 

pour'd, P. L. i. 220, 352, iii. 
674, iv. 365, vi. 811, vii. 197, 
viii.220, ix.98, xii. 21,498; 
P.P. iv. 16, 411. 

pour'd forth, P. L. iv. 243. 

pour'd out, P. L. ii. 997. 

pouring forth, P. L. v. 296. 

pourlieus, P. L. ii. 833. 

powder, P. L. iv. 815. 

powder'd, P. L. vii. 581. 

power, P. L. i. 44, 79, 103, 112, 
241, 556, 626, 736, 753, ii. 
102, 336, 350, 356, 447, 884, 
955, iii. 242, 317, iv. 6l, 66, 
412, 429, 781, 881, 956, v. 
159, 235, 458, 526, 660, 728, 
739,776,79^, 821, s6l, vi. 
134,223,247,301,319,343, 
637, 678, 705, 730, 780, 815, 
vii. 587, 603, viii. 249, 279, 
379, ix. 95, 349, 680, S20, 
835,945, x. 251, 255, 284, 
408, 515, 531, 586, 801, 986, 
1004, xi. 126,338,417, xii. 
200, 369,420, 460, 517, 521 ; 
P. 21. i. 139, 219,n.45, 163, 



327,380,393,394, iii. 251, 
iv. 65, 103, 254, 3p4, 494, 
528; S.A. 430, 745, 799, 
935, 1003, 1054, 1150, 1275, 
1367, 1404 ; IlPenf.95, 103 ; 
Arc. 44; Com. 31, 437, 5S7, 
677,801,817,858; Son.\. 8, 
viii. 13, xvii. 10; Od. Nat. 
127^, 196; Od. D. F. I. 28; 
. Od. Sol. Muf 3 ; Vac. Ex. 89 ; 
Pf. ii. 3, vii. 36, exxxvi. 54, 

powerful, P. L. ii. 77^, iii. 602, 
iv. 58, vii. 208, viii. 533, ix. 
587, x. 247; P. R. iii. 155; 
S. A. 791, 862; Com. 902. 

powerfulleft, P. L. vi. 425. 

powers, P. L. i. 128, 186, 360, 
622, ii. 11, 310, 456, 522, 
875, 968, iii. 52, 100, 176, 
213, 256, 320, 390, 397, iv, 
63, 939, v. 601, 697, 743, 
772, 824. 840, 841, vi. 22, 
6l, 85, 686, 786, 898, vii. 
162, ix. 136, 600, 1048, x. 
34,86, 186, 395,460, xi. 221, 
xii. 91, 577 ; P. R. i. 44, ii. 
124, iii. 30, 338; S. A. 251, 
1100,1190; 11 Pen/. 21 ; Oct. 
Cir. 1. 

practice, P. L. xi. 802 ; S. A. 
114. 

pra&is'd, P. L. iv. 122, 124, 
9^5. 

praetors, P. R. iv. 63. 

praife, P. X. i. 731, iii. 106, 
414,415,453,676,997, iv. 
46, 436, 638, 676, 679, v. 
147,169,172,179,184,191, 
192, 196, 199, 204, 405, vi. 
376, 745, vii. 187, ix. 195, 
6*93,749, 750, 800, 1020, xi. 
617; P. R. ii. 227,251,456, 
464, iii. 48,51, 52, 56; S.A. 
1410, 1621 ; Lye. 76;llPc?if. 
20; Arc. 11 ; Com,TJ\, 776 \ 
Son. xiii. 6, xv. 2 ; Ep. M. 
Win. 12 ; Eurip. 3 ; Pf. vi. 
10, lxxxiv. 18, lxxxvi. 41, 



vqju 1, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Ixxxvii. 17, lxxxviii. 43, 

cxiv. 6, cxxxvi 2. 
prais'd, P. L. ii. 480, vii. 258 ; 

P. P. iv. 348. 
praifes, P. L. iii. 147, iv* 144; 

P. R. iii. 64; 5. ^. 175, 

436, 450; Son. xvi. 8; Pf 

cxxxvi. 9- 
praifing, Com. 709. 
prank'd, Cow. 759- 
pravity, P. L. xii. 2S8. 
prauncing, P. P. iii. 314. 
pray, P. L. iii. 190, x. 1060, 

xi.32; Vac. Ex. 15; Pf iv. 

23, v. 4, lxxxvi. 2. 
pray'd, P. L. v. 209 ; 5. -rf. 351, 

1637; Pf. lxxxvi. 24. 
prayer, P. L. iii. 191, xi. 6, 

146, 139, 307, 311; S. A. 

581, 649; Pf iv. 6, v. 8, 

vi. 18, Ixxx. 20, lxxxviii, 5, 

5& 
prayers, P. L. x. 859, 5)52, xi. 

14,24,252; 5. ^f. 359, 392, 

520,961 ; P/ lxxxvi. 19. 
praying, P. Z-. x. 1081, xi. 2 ; 

P. P. i. 490. 
prays, P. L. xi. <)0. 
preach'd, P. L. xi. 723, xii. 

448. 
preaching, S.A. 859- 
preamble, P. L. iii. 367. 
precedence, P. L. ii. 33. 
precedes, P. L. ix. 327, x. 640. 
precept, P. L. x. 652. 
precepts, P. P. iv. 264 ; Com. 

708. 
prccindls, P. L. iii. 88. 
precious, P. L. i. 692, iii. 6ll, 

v. 132, ix. 106, 795, xii. 

293; S.A. 538; Caw. 71P, 

847, 913; Od.Nat. 71. 
precipice, P. L. i. 173. 
precipitance, P. L. vii. 291. 
precipitant, P. i. iii. 56*3. 
precipitate, P. 7>. vi. 280. 
precife, P. L. xii. 589- 
predeltinatiun, P. L, iii. 114. 



predicam »nt, Vac. Ex. 56. 
predi&ion, P. L. xii. 553 ; P. R 
i. 142, iii. 354, 394; S. A- 
44. 
predids, P. P. iii. 356. 
predominant, P. L. viii. 160. 
pre-eminence, P. L. v. 66l, xi„ 

347. 
pre-eminent, P. L. iv. 447, viii 

279. 
preface, P. L. ix. 676, xi. 251 

P.R. ii. 115; S. ^. 1553. 
prefer, P. L. i. 17, vi. 144 

P.R. iv. 84,303, 1374. 
preferr'd, P. L. viii. 52, ix. QQ 

S. A. 1019. 
preferring, P. L. i. 102, ii. 255 

S. A. 464, 1672. 
prefix'd, P. R. i. 269, iv. 392 

Od. D. F. I. 59- 
pregnant, P. L. i. 22, ii. 779, 

913, vi. 483; Od.Paf. 56. 
prelate, Fore, of Con. 1. 
pre-ordain'd, P. R. i. 127- 
prepare, P. £. v. 689, xi. 555* 

637 ; P. R. i. 272 ; Pf lxxx. 

37, lxxxi. 5. 
prepar'd, P. /,. i. 70, 6l5, 700 : 

iv. 664, v. 303, vi. 738, 780, 

vii. 225, viii. 299, ix. 381 , xi. 

126,365,571, xii. 144; P. U. 

it. 273. 
preparing, P. R. iii. 389. 
prefage, P. L. vi. 201; S.A. 

1387 ; Vac. Ex. 70. 
prefages, P. R. i. 394. 
prefacing, P.L. i. 627, xii,6l3; 

Ep. M. Win. 44. 
prc%ter, Fore, of Con. 20. 
prefcrib'd, P. £. iii. 82, iv. 878, 

909, x. 657; S.A. 30. 
ptefcript, P. L. xii. 249 ; S. A. 

308. 
prefence, P. L. ii. 240, iii. 265, 

649, v. 358, vii. 11, viii. 3 1 J 

551, ix. 836, 85S,X.100, 144, 

xi. 319, 341, 351, xii. 103 r 

563; $ 4, 28, 1321 ; Com 



VERBAL INDEX. 



950; Pf lxxxviii. 5, cxiv. 

15. 
prefent, P. L. i. 20, 628, ii. 34, 

223, 281, 459, 985, iii. 78, iv. 

762, v. 582, vii. 518, ix. 316, 

1092, x. 340, 651, 996, xi. 

351, 871, xii. 201 ; P. R. i. 

258; S. A. 1085,1378; Com. 

90, 287, 789 ; Son. xix. 5 ; 

Od. Nat. l6;Od.D.F. 1.74. 

at prefent, S. A. 1446. 
prefent, (verb) P. L. vi. 26, ix. 

213 ; S.A. 21 ; Sow. xix. 5; 

Orf. So/. Mw/! 5. 
preferred, P.L. iii.48, vi. 106, 

ix. 974 ; P. R. iv. 38. 
prefenting, P. L. xi. 21 ; IlPenf 

99> 
prefentments, Com. 156. 
preferve, P. £. vi. 443, xi. 579, 

873 ; Pf. lxxxvi. 5. 
preferv'd, S.A. 1 143 ; P/. lxxxv. 

24. 
preferves, P. P. ii. 372. 
prefident, P. P. i. 447 ; Son. 

x. 1. 
prefs, Pf. lxxxviii. 30. 
prefs'd, P. L. iv. 501, v. 346. 
prefume, P. L. viii. 121, xii. 

530; S.A. 1156. 
prefum'd, P. L. vi. 631, vii. 13, 

viii. 356, ix. 405,921; P.P. 

iii. 345 ; S. ^. 462, 1209- 
prefumes, P. L. x. 50. 
prefumption, Com. 431. 
prefumptuous, P. L. ii. 522, iv. 

912, viii. 367 ; S.A. 1531. 
prefumptuoufly, S. A. 499. 
pretence, P. L. vi. 421, xii. 

520; S.A. 1196; Ccw*. 160. 
pretences, P. X. ii. 825. 
pretend, P.L. v. 244 ;S.^. 212. 
pretended, P. L. x. 872 ; S. A. 

873 ; Com. 326. 
pretending, P. L. iv. 947, V. 

768. 
pretends, P. R. i. 73. 
pretend'ft, P. ii. i. 430. 



pretexts, S.A. 901. 
prevail, P. L. vi. 795, x.40, 408. 
prevail'd, P. i. ix. 873 ; P. P. 
iii. 167 ; S.A. 869 ; Ep.Hobf 

1.9. 
prevailing, P. L. iv. 973; S.^. 

740. 
prevails, P. i. x. 258; S. A. 

661. 
prevalent, P. L. vi.411, xi. 144. 
prevenient, P. L. xi. 3. 
prevent, P. L. iv. 996, x. 37, 

9S7,xi.773;6'.^.256;Co7W. 

573 ; Sore. xix. 8 ; Od. Nat. 

24 ; Vac. Ex. 73 ; P/ lxxxviii. 

56. 
prevented, P. L. ii. 467, 739; 

S.A. 1103; Com. 285. 
preventing, P. P. iv. 492. 
prevention, P. L. vi. 129, 320. 
preventive, Fore, of Con. 16. 
prey, P. £. i. 382, ii. 181, 806, 

844, iii. 248, 433, 441, iv. 

184,399,ix.4l6,x.268,490, 

609, xi. 124, 793, xii. 341 ; 

S. A. 260, 613, 694 ; Com* 

534, 574 ; Pf. lxxx. 25. 
prick forth, P.L. ii. 536. 
prickles, Com. 631. 
pride, P. L. i. 36, 58, 527, 572? 

603, ii. 428, iv. 40, 310, 809, 

v. 665,740, vi. 341, vii.478 r 

x.577 f 874, 1044, xi. 795; 

P.P. ii. 219, iii. 84, 311,409, 

iv 300,570; S. A. 532 - r Com. 

431, 761 ; Ep. M. Win. 37 ; 

Pf lxxxiii. 45. 
prieft, P. L. i. 494, xi. 25; 

P. R. i. 247, 487, iii* 83 ; 

S. A. 857, 1419; Son. xiii. 

10 ; Od. Nat. 180 ; Od. Pajf. 

15 ; Fore, of Con. 20. 
priefts, P. L. i. 480, xii. 353 ; 

P.R. iii. 16'9; S.A. 1463, 

1653 ; Com. 136. 
prime, P. £. i. 506, ii. 423, iii. 

637, iv.592, v.21, 170,295, 

563, vi. 447, viii. 194, 540, 



2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ix. 200, 395, 9^0, x. 356, xi. 

245, 598; P. R> i. 413, ii. 

200, iii. 123 ; S. A. 70, 85, 

234, 388 ; Com. 289- 
primitive, P. L. v. 350. 
primrofc, Lye. 142 ; Od. D. F. I. 

2 ; Od. May-M. 4. 
primrofe-feafon, Com. 6j 1. 
prince, P. L. i. 128, iv. 871, vi. 

44, 281, x. 185, 383, 621, xi. 

298, xii. 454 ; P. It. iv. 441 ; 

Lye. 8; Od. Nat. 62. 
princedoms, P. L iii. 320, v. 

601, 77%, 840, x. 87, 460. 
princely, P. L. i. 359, ii. 304, 

xi. 220 ; Arc. 36; Com. 34. 
princes, P. L. i. 315, 735, ii. 

313, v. 356, xi. 298 ; S. A. 

851; Com. 325; P/ ii. 3, 

lxxxii. 24 5 lxxxiii. 42. 
principalities, P. L. vi. 447, *• 

186. 
principled, S. ;4. 760. 
principles, Ep. Hobf. II. 10. 
print, Od. Nat. 20. 
printed, Fore, of Con. 11. 
printlefs, CW. 897. 
prifon, P. L. i. 71, ii. 59, 434, 

iv. 824, 906, vi. 66'0, xi. 

725 ; P. R. i. 364 ; S. A. 6, 

ll6l, 1480. 
prifon-houfe, ,S. A. 922. 
prifon'd, Com. 256. 
prifon within prifon, S. A. 

153. 
prifoner, S. A. 7, 808, 1460. 
private, P. L. v. 109; P- #• ii. 

81, iii. 22, 232, iv. 94, 331, 

509, 639; S.A. 868, 1208, 

1211, 1465. 
privation, P. Jl. iv. 400. 
privilege, P. L. vii. 589 ; S. A. 

104. 
privy, Lye. 128. 
prize, UAL 122; P/. iv. 11. 
probofcis, P. L. iv. 347. 
proceed, P. L. v. 470, x. 824, 

xi. 69, xii. 7, 381. 



proceeded, P. L. vii. 69, x. 

164,913, xi.072. 
proceeding, P. L. ix. 94; 

P. R. i. 350. 
proceeds, P. L. ix. 719, 973 ; 

Lye. 88. 
proceed'ft, P. 11. iv. 125. 
procefs, P. L. ii. 297, vii. 178. 
proceflion, P. JL. vii. 222. 
proeinc~t, P. X. vi. 19. 
proclaim, P. L. i. 754, iii. 

325; P. it. i. 70; S. A. 

435. 
proclaim'd, P. L. v. 663, 784 ; 

P. P. i. 275, iv. 474; S. A. 

1598. 
proclaiming, P. X. ii. 499, xii. 

407. 
proclaims, P. X. xii. 36*1 ; S. A. 

972. 
proclaimer, P. JR.. i. 18. 
proconfuls, P. JR. iv. 63. 
procreation, P. .L. viii. 597. 
procure, P.L. ii. 225. 
prodigies, P. P. iv. 482. 
prodigious, P. L. ii. 625, 780, 

vi/247, x. 302, xi. 687; 

S. A. 10S3. 
produce, P. L. i.650, viii. 146, 

xi. 687, xii. 470; P.R. i. 

150, iv. 184; S.A. 1346. 
produe'd, P. L. x. 692, xi. 29; 

P.R iii. 122. 
produces, P. L. iii. 6l0, v. 

112. 
producing, P. L. ix. 721. 
product, P. L. xi. 6S3. 
productive, P. L. ix. 111. 
proem, P. L. ix. 549. 
profane, 6'. A. 693, 1362. 
profan'd, P. L. i. 390, iv. 951, 

ix. 930; S.A. 377. 
profaner, UPenf. 140. 
profefs'd, P. P. iv. 293 ; S. A. 

385, 884. 
profcfTing, P. L. iv. 948. 
proffer, P. L. ii. 425. 
profler'd, P. i{. ii. 330. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



profit, P. L. vi. 90.9; P. R. iv. 

345; 8. A. 126*1. 
profits, P. L. viii. 571, ix. 76*1. 
profluent, P. L. xii. 442. 
profound, (fubft.) P. L. ii.438, 

980. 
profound, P. L. ii. 592, 858, 

vii. 233; P.R. iv. 214; Pj\ 

lxxxviii. 25. 
profoundeft, P. L. i. 251 ; Od. 

Nat. 218. 
profundity, P. L. vii. 229. 
prof ufc, P. L. iv. 243, viii. 

286 ; Arc. 9. 
progenitor, P. L. v. 544, xi. 

346. 
progeny, P. L. ii. 430, iii. 96, 

v. 503, 600, xi. 107, xii. 

138; P. R. iv. 554; Sow. 

xii. 6. 
progrefs, P. X. iv.976, xi. 175. 
progreflive, P. L. viii. 127. 
prohibit, P. L. ii. 437- 
prohibition, P. L. iv. 433, ix. 

645. 
prohibitions, P. L. ix. 76*0. 
projecting, P. L. ii. 329. 
proje&s, P.P. iii. 391. 
prolifick, P. X. vii. 280. 
prologue, P. L. ix. 854. 
prolong, P. X. xi. 547 ; P. P. 

ii. 41, iv. 46'9. 
prolong'd, P. L. xi.331. 
prolongs, Od. Nat. 100. 
promifcuous, P. L. i. 3S0 ; 

P.P. iii. 118. 
promife, P. L. ii. 238, xi. 155, 

xii. 137, 322, 487; S. A. 

38, 753. 
promis'd, P. L. iv. 589, 732, 

ix. 843, 1070, xi. 331, 413, 

xii. '260, 519, 542, 623; 

P.P. i. 265; S.A.635. 
Promifed Land, P. L. iii. 531, 

xii. 172 ; P. R. iii. 157, 

439. 
promifes, P. L. iv. 84. 
^remontorieg, P. L. vi. .654. 



promontory, P. X. vii 414 J 

Lj/c. 94. 
promote, P. L. ix. 234, x. 

745; P. P. i. 205. 
promotion, P. P. iii. 202. 
prompt, P. L. v. 149, viii. 

240, ix. 854 ; Com. 229- 
prompted, P. L. vi. 635; P. P. 

i. 12; 5. ^. 318. 
prompting, S. A. 422. 
prone, P. L. i. 195, ii. 478, iv. 

353, v. 266, vii. 506, viii. 

433, ix. 497, x. 514 ; S. A. 

1459; Pf- lxxxvi. 13. 
pronounc'd, P. L. ii. 352, 809, 

iv. 427, 76l, v. 148, 814, 

viii. 333, ix. 154, 553, x. 

197, 640, 1022, xi. 83; 

P. R. i. 32, 284, iii. 120, 

iv. 275, 513 ; Son. xxi. 3. 
pronounces, Lye. 83. 
pronouncing, S. A. 289. 
proof, P. L. i. 132, ii. 101, 

686, iii. 103, iv. 350, 520, 

1010, v. 865, viii. 535, ix. 

298, 967, 1142, x. 385,882; 

P. P. i. 11, 130, 400, iv. 

533,621; S. A. 526, 1145, 

1314, 1475, 1602. 
prop, P. L. ix. 210. 
prop, (verb) P. L. ix. 433. 
propagate, P. L. viii. 420. 
propagated, P. X. viii. 580, x. 

729. 
propenfe, S. A. 455. 
proper, P. L. iii. 75, ii. 634, v. 

276, 493, viii. 619. 
properly, P. L. x. 791* 
property, Com. 469 ; Vac. Ex. 

87. 
prophecies, P. P. iv. 381. 
prophecy, 5. ^. 473. 
prophefied, P. P. iv. 108. 
prophefy, P. L. xii. 325. 
prophet, P. L. xii. 375 ; P. P. 

i. 70, 80, 328, 491, ii- 51, 

270, 312, iii. 352 -, Od. PaJJl 

37. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

prophetick, P. L. ii, 546; P. R. proftratc, P. L. i. 280, vi; 

i. 255, iii. 184; 11 Pen/, 174; 841, x. 1087, 1099; Pf 

Od. Nat. 180. lxxxviii. 4. 

prophets, P. L. iii. 36", xii. proftration, P. L. v. 782. 

243 ; P. P. i. 260, 375, ii. proteft. Son. viii. 4. 

18, iii. 178, iv. 226, 356, proteftion, S. A. 887; Pf 

503. vii. 3. 

propitiation, P. L. xi. 34. protects, P. L. ix. 266. 

propitious, P. L. v. 507, viii. protefling, P. L. x. 480. 

380, xi. 441, xii. 6l2 ; Son. Proteus, P. L. iii. 604. 

i. 4. proud, P. L. i. 43, 533, ii. 10, 

proportion, P. L. viii. 385, ix. 533, 691, iii. 159, iv. 536, 

711 ; Com. 773. 770, 858, 971, v. 809, 907, 

proportional, P. L. ix. 936. vi. 89, 131, 191, 609, 789, 

proportion'd, P. L. v. 479 » vii. 609, ix. 383, x. 424, 

S. A. 209; Com. 330. 764, xii. 25, 72, 342; P. R. 

proportions, P. L. xi. 562. i. 219, 372, iii. 334, iv. 56% 

propofal, S. A. 487- 595 ; S. A. 137, 345, 1069, 

propofals, P. L. vi. 618. 1462 ; Com. 33 ; Son. xvi. 5 ; 

propofo, P. R. i. 212. P/. lxxx. 35, lxxxiii. 7, 

propofd, P. L. ii. 380, 447, lxxxvi. 49, lxxxvii. 11. 

viii. 64, x. 757; P. R. i. proudeft, P. L. xii. 497; P. P. 

371, iv. 199, 370, 572; iii. 99- 

S. A. 292, 1200, 1471. proudly, P. L. i. 590, vii. 439; 

propofeft, P. L. viii. 400, x. P. A', iv. 34, 580; 5.^.55; 

1038. P/*. ixxxi. 58. 

propound, P. L. vi. 567; P.P. prove, P. L. ii. 369, 808, iv. 

iv. 178. 985, vi. 117, 170, viii. 388, 

propounded, P. L. vi. 6l2. x. 66*4, 76l, 963, xi. 123 ; 

propriety, P. L. i\. 751. P. R. i. 370; 6'. J. 1181, 

profe, P. L. i. 16", v. 150. 1262, 1400; Com. 592 ; Ep. 

profecute, S. A. 6*03, S97. Af. Win. 44 ; £/>. //o*/. II. 1. 

Profcrpin, P. L. iv. 269. prov'd, P. L. i. 92, iii. 119, "v. 

Proferpina, P. L. ix. 396. 48, vi. 90, 271, ix. 333, 6l6; 

profpect, P. L. iii. 77, 54S, iv. Pf. lxxx v. 11. 

144, 200, v. 88, vii. 423, proverb'd, 5. XJ203. 

556, x. 89, 552, xi. 380, xii. proves, P, L. vi. 428, 819; S. A. 

143 ; P. P. ii. 286, iii. 263. 64, 1037, 1575. 

profpe&ivo, Vac. Ex. 71. provide, P. /,. vi. 520 ; Cow. 1S7. 

profper, P. //. ii. 39, vi. 79-^ provided, P. />. viii. 363, x. 

xii. 316; Pf. 1. 10. 1058, xi. 6*1. 

profper'd,P. L.viii.45, X.360. Providence, P. I. i. 25, l6? 7 

profperity, P. L. ii. 39. ii* 559, xii. 564, 647 ; P. P. 

proiperous, P. L. ii. 259, xi. j. 445, ii. 54, iii. 440; S. A. 

304; P.P. i. 14, 104; S. A. 6*70, 1545; Com. 329; Pf. 

191 ; Ccw«. 270. vii. 8. 

proftituting, P. /,. xi. 716 ; provident, P. L. v. 82$, vifi 

$..4. 1358. 485# 



VERBAL INDEX. 



provides, P. L. x. 237. 
providing, P. P. ii. 310. 
province, P. L. vi. 77 ; P. P. 

i. 118, 448, iii. 158. 
provinces, P. P. iii. 315, iv. 

63, 136*. 
proving, S. A. 227. 
prcvifion, P. L. ix. 623 ; P. P. 

ii. 402 ; Com. 765. 
provifions, P. L. xi. 732. 
provoke, P. L. i. 644, ii. 82, x. 

1027- 
provok'd, P. P. i. 645, iv. 916, 

v. 154, ix. 922; S. A. 46*1, 

643. 
provokes, P. P. ix. 175. 
provoking, P. P. xii. 318. 
prow, P. X. xi. 746. 
prowefs, P. L. i. 588, vi. 45, 

xi. 789; P. P. iii. 19; S. A. 

286, 1098 ; Pf. exxxvi. 6*2. 
prowelt, P. P. iii. 342. 
prowling, P. X. iv. 183. 
prudence, P. P. iv. 26*3. 
prudent, P. L. ii. 46*8, vii.430. 
prune, P. L. iv. 438, ix. 210. 
Pfalms, P. P. iv. 335 ; Od. Sol. 

Muf. 15. 
pfaltery, Pf. lxxxi. 7. 
pry, P. L. i. 655, ix. 159. 
pr'ythce, Com. 512, 6*15. 
Pfyche, Com. 1005. 
j)ublick, P. P. ii. 303, 448, iv. 

3S9, x. 509, xii. 317, P. P. 

i. 204, ii. 46*5," iv. 96; S. A. 

$67, 992, 1306, 1314, 1327, 

1393, 1615 ; So?i. xv. 12, 13; 

Eurip. 2. 

in publick, P. P. ii. 52, 84. 
publifli, P. L. ii. 238; P. P. i. 

188 ; S. A f 777. 
publifiYd, S. A. 499. 
puiffance, P. L. v. 864, vi. U9. 
puiffant, P. L. i. 632, vi. 714, 

xii. 322 ; P. P. ii. 425 ; ^rc.60. 
pull, S. A. 1626. 
pull'd, 5. .4. 1589, 1659 ;.L^/. 

103 ; Ep. Hobf 1. 16. 



pull'd up, S. A. 146. 

pulp, P. P. iv. 335. 

pulle, P. P. ii. 278 ; Com. 721. 

punctual, P. L. viii.23. 

Punick, P.P. v.340; P. P. iii. 
102. 

punifli, P. L. ii. 159, 1032. 

puniOVd, P. P. ii. 213, x. 516, 
803; P. P. iii. 214. 

punifher, P. L. iv. 103. 

puniftiment, P. P. i. 155, ii. 
334, 699, iv. 911, v. 881, vi. 
53, 807, 904, x. 133, 242, 
544, 76S, 949, 1039, xi. 520, 
710, xii. 404; S. A. 413, 
489, 504, 702, 1225. 

puny, P. L. ii. 367. 

purchafe, P. L. iv. 101, x. 506, 
579 ; Com. 607, 

pure, P. L. i. 18, 425, iii. 7, 
57, 564, 6*07, iv. 153, 293, 
3 1 6, 456, 502, 737, 747, 755, 
805, 806, 897, v. 4, 100, 348, 
407,475, vi.758,vii.244, 264, 
viii. 180, 506, 622, 623, 627, 
x. 632, 638, 784, xi. 50, 285, 
452, 523, 606, xii. 444, 513 ; 
P. R. i. 74, 77, 134, 486, ii 9 
63, 370, iii. 27; S. A. 10, 
848, 1727; Lye. 81, 175; 
II Pen/. 31 ; Com. 16, 794, 
826, 912; Son. ix. 14, xiv. 
14, xviii. 3, xxiii. 9 ; Od. Sol, 
Muf 6; Fore, of Con. 9; Pf. 
viii. 11. 

purer, P. L. ii. 215, iv. 153, v. 
416; Com. 111. 

pureft, P. P, ii. 137, v. 406, vi, 
660, 661 ; S. A. 613. 

purfled, Com. 995. 

purgatory, Son. xiii. 14. 

purge, P. L. ii. 141, iii. 54, xi, 
900. 

purge off, P. P. ii. 400, xi. 52, 

purg'd, P. L. vii. 237, xi. 414, 
xii. 548. 

purification, Son. xxif!. 6. 

purified, P. P. i. 74. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

purity, P. P. iv. 745, ix. 1075; put, P.L.i. 132, ii. 517, iv. 

S. A.3\9; Com. 427. 3, 941, 1002, x. 179, +97 ; 

purlieu, P. P. iv. 404. P. P. ii. 218 ; S. A. 37 ; Pf 

purling, P. P. ii. 345. iv. 32, viii. 18. 

purloin'd, P. P. ii. 946. put forth, P. P. i. 641, vi. 

purple, P. P. i. 451, iv. 259, 583, vii. 310. 

596, 764, vii. 479, ix. 429, put not forth, P. P. vi. 853> 

xi. 241 ; Lye. 141 ; Com. 46'; vii. 17 1. 

Son. xiv. 10; 0</. P>. p. J. 27. put off, P.P. iii. 240; Co/w. 

purples, P. P. vii. 30. 82. 

purpofe, P. L. iii. 172, iv. 337, put on, P. P. iii. 479? vi- 734, 

vi. 675, vii. 614, viii. 337, 735, ix.714. 

xi. 195, xii. 301 ; P. R. i. put out, S. A. 1103. 

444, ii. 101, iii. 186, iv. 93 ; puts, P. P. iv. 386, 888 ; 5. A. 

S.A.569, 1406, 1498. 1271. 

on purpofe, P. L. iv. 584. puts forth, S. A. 163. 

with purpofe, P. P. ii. 971, puts on, P. P. ii. 6.31, ix. 667. 

iii. 90, vii. 78. putting off, P. P. iv. 739, ix. 

purpofd, P. P. iii. 404, iv. 373, 713. 

ix. 416 ; P. R. i. 127; S. A. Pygmean, P. P. i. 780. 

399; Coin. 284; Vac. Ex. 57. pyramid, P. P. ii. 1013; £/>. 

purpofely, Pf. vii. 49. /P. 67/. 4. 

purpofes, P. P. i. 430. pyramids, P. P. v. 758. 

purfd, Com. 642. Pyirha, P. P. xi. 12; Orf. 

purfue, P. P. ii. 8, 249, 701, Hor. 3. 

iv. 362, vi. 715, xii. 206; Pythian, P.P. ii. 530, x. 530. 

P. R. iv. 470 ; S. A. 1275 ; Python, P. P. x. 531. 

Com. 503; P/*.vii. 13, lxxxiii. 

57. 

purfued, P. P. i. 308, ii. 79, Q- 

165, 790, iv. 125, 572, vi. 

858, ix. 15, 397, xi. 188, quadrate, P. P. xi. 62. 

202, 563 ; P. P. i. 195, ii. quadrature, P. P. x. 381. 

405 ; Son. xvi. 6. quaff, P. L. v. 638. 

purfuers, P. L. i. 326; P. P. quaint, P. L. viii. 78, ix. 35; 

iii. 325. S. A. 1303; Lye. 139; ^rc. 

purfues, P.P. i. 15, ii. 524, 47 ; Com. 15/ ;0d. Nat. 194. 

945, 949, x. 783, xii. 205. qualms, P.P. xi. 4S1. 

purfuing, P. P. ii. 998, vi. 52, quarrels, S. A. 1329. 

xi. 192, xii. 195. quarry, P. P. x. 2S1 ; 0d> PaJJ\ 

purfuit, P. P. i. 170, iii. 397, 46. 

vi. 538; P. P. iii. 306; Com. quarries, P. P. v. 759- 

829. quarter, P. P. vi. 530. 

purvey 'd, P. P. ix. 1021 ; P. P. quarter'd, P. P. iv. 202. 

ii. 333. quarters, P. P. iii. 7 14, v. 192, 

pufh, P. P. iv. 470 ; Pf. v. 31. 689 ; Com. 29. 

pufiVd, P. P. vi. 197, x. 6*70, quaternion, P.P. v. 181. 

1074, xi. 83 J . queen, P.P. i. 439, iv. 60S, viii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



60, ix. 684; P. P. ii. 212, 

iy.<\5;UPtnf. 19; Arc. 94>, 

108; Com. 241, 265, 446, 

1002 ; Od. Nat. 201 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 74. 
quell, P. L. v. 740, xii. 311 ; 

P.R. i. 218; S. A. 1272; 

P/I cxxxvi. 10. 
quell'd, P. X. iv. 860, vi. 386, 

457, xi. 496 ; P. R. iii. 35 ; 

S.J. 286, 563; Pfv. 30. 
queller, P. R. iv. 634. 
quench, P. X. xii. 492 ; P. P. 

iii. 38 ; CW. 66. 
quench'd, P. X. ii. 939, in. 25 ; 

5. A. 95. 
quell, P. X. ii. 830, ix. 414 ; 

Arc. 34 ; Com. 321; Od. D. 

F. L 18. 
question, P. X. iv. 887 ; S. A. 

1254. 
queftion, (verb) P. X. iv. 882, 

ix. 720. 
queftion'd, P. X. iii. 166; Lye. 

93. 
queftions, P. P. iv. 21 9. 
quick, P. X. iv. 1004, v. 269, 

vi. 597, 619, vii. 405, viii. 

259, ix. 399, xii. 460 ; P.P. 

323 ; Com. 41 , 841 ; Vac. Ex. 

57* 
quicken, Pf. lxxx. 75. 
quicken'd, P. L. v. 85, ix. 587; 

Ep.Hobf II. 16. 
quickening, P. X. v. 86l. 
quickefl, P. P. iii. 238. 
quickly, Com. 1014; Od. D.T.I. 

42 ; £/?. M. JFit. 16. 
quiet, (fubft.) II Pen/. 45 ; Pf. 

lxxxiii. 50. 
quiet, (adj.) P. L. xi. 272, xii. 

80 ; P. R. iii. 360. 
quiet, (verb) S. A. 1724. 
quietly, P. R. iii. 192. 
quills, Xj/c. 188. 
Quiloa, P. X. xi. 399. 
quintefience, P. X. iii. 716, 

vii. 244. 



Quintilian, Son. xi. 11. 
Quintius, P. P. ii. 446. 
quips, L'Al. 27. 
quire, P. X. iii. 217, iv. 264, 

ix. 198, xii. 366; P.P. i. 

242; II Pen/. 163 ; Son. xiii. 

10; Od.Nat. 15. 
quires, P. L. iii. 666, iv. 711, 

v. 251, vii. 254; Od. Soi. 

Muf. 12 ; Brut. 6. 
quit, P. X. iv. 51, v. 882, vi. 

548, vii. 440, xi. 548; P.P. 

iii. 244; S. A. 1484, 1709; 

Son. xii. 1 ; Od. on Time, 20. 

fo quit, P. R. i. 477- 
quite, P. X. ii. 93, 96, 282, iii. 

50, 173, xi. 258, 712, xii. 

28, 54; P. P. ii. 224, iv.317, 

352, 366; S. A. 907, 1158, 

UAL 149; Com. 527; 0d. 

Nat. 67; Pf. lxxxviii. 17. 
quitted, P. X. iii. 307. iv. 770, 

x. 627. 
quiver, P. X. vi. 764, ix. 390. 
quiver'd, Com. 422. 
quivers, P. X. iii. 367. 
quoth, Xj/c. 107 ; Ep. Hobf II. 

17. 



R s 



Rabba, P. X. i. 397- 

Rabbies, P.P. iv. 218. 

rabble, P. P. iii. 50. 

race, P. X. i. 432, 577, 780, ii. 
194, 348, 382, 529, 834, iii. 
161, 280, 679, iv. 475, 732, 
vi. 501, 896, vii. 33, 45, 99, 
155, 189, 530, 630, viii. 339, 
ix. 416, x. 385, 607, 984, 
988, xi. 13, 331, 608, 621, 
782, 786, xii. 104, 163, 214, 
505, 554; P. JR. ii. 181,310, 
iii. 423; S. A. 29, 597 ;\0d. 
Paff.56; Od. on Time, 1. 

races, P. X. ix. 33. 

rack'd, P.X. i. 126; P. P. iii. 
203. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



racking, P. L. xi. 481. 
radiance, P. L. vii. 194. 
radiant, P. L. ii. 492, iii. 63, 

379, 594, 646, iv. 797, v. 

457, vi. 76l, vii. 247, x. 85, 

xi. 206; P. R. iii. 237, iv. 

428; Arc. i4 ; Com.. 374; 

0</. JVaf . 146 ; Ejk M. Win. 73. 
rafters, Com. 324. 
rage, P. L. i. 95, 175, 553. ii. 

67, 144, 171,268,539, 581, 

791, iii. 80, 241, iv. 9, 857, 

96g f v. 845, vi. 199, 217, 

6'35, 696, 813, viii. 244, ix. 

16, xii. 58, 194; P. R. i. 

138, iv. 445, 499; S. A. 836; 

Pf. vii. 20, viii. 8. 
rag'd, P. L. i. 277, (>66 t vi. 211, 

xi. 444. 
rages, S. A. 963. 
ragged, UAL 9. 
raging, P. L. ii. 213, 600, v. 

891, x. 286. 
rags, P. L. iii. 491 ; S. A. 415. 
rail'd, Son. xii. 6. 
rain, P. L. x. 1063, xi. 743, 

826, 894 ; P. R. iv. 412. 
rain, (verb) P. L. viii. 146; 

L'Al. 122. 
rainbow, Co?«. 300 ; Od. Nat. 

143. 
rainbows, P. L. vii. 4l6. 
rain'd, P. L. vii. 331, ix. 1122; 

P. P. ii.312. 
raife, P. L. i. 23, ii. 272, iii. 

296, iv. 574, 806, r. 680, vi. 

224, viii. 430, ix. 43, 314, 

xi. 103, 79^, 877, xii. 123, 

162,318,547; P. R. i. 232, 

iii. 333; S. A. 625; Lye. 

70; // Pen/. 104; Arc. 8; 

Son. xv. 6; iy! vii. 62, lxxxii. 

1 1. 
rais'd, P.L.i. 43,99, 529,551, 

ii. 5, 427,468,521, iii. 258, 

iv. 60, 226, 416, 590, v. 226, 

.'391,758, vi. 138, 856, vii. 

157, viii. 258, 300, ix. 177, 



314, 669 f 740, x. 457, 1012, 

xi. 422; P.R.L 7, 124, ii. 

64, 423, iii. 59, iv. 430; 

S. A. 273, 1211; Dante. 

II. 2. 
rallied, P.L. i. 269, vi. 786. 
ram, Com. 497* 
Ramath-lechi, S. A. 145. 
Ramie], P. L. vi. 372. 
Ramoth, P. R. i. 373. 
ramp, S. A. 139. 
rampant, P. L. vii. 466. 
rampart, P. X. i. 678. 
ramp'd, P. L. iv. 343. 
rams, Pf. cxiv, 11. 
ran, P. L. i. 451, iv. 240, vi. 

642, viii. 268, ix. 891, x. 27, 

xii. 608;£. A. 129. 
rancour, P. L. ix. 409, x. 

1044. 
random, P. L. iv. 930, x. 628, 

at random, S. A. 118. 
rang, Od. Nat. 158. 
range. P. i. iv. 621, 754, ix. 

134, x. 492; P.P.i.S66. 
ranged, P. L. ii. 522, vi. 48, vii. 

426, xi. 644. 
rang'd, P. R. iii. 322 ; S. A, 

1137, 1694. 
ranging, P. L. vi. 248. 
rank, (adj.) Lye. 126; Cow. 

17- 
rank, (verb) P. L. xi. 278; Pf. 

v. 8. 
rank'd, P. L. ii. 887, vi. 604 ; 

S. A.34>5. 
rankle, S. .4.621. 
ranks, P. L. i. 616. iv. 140, vi, 

71, xii. 213; Arc. 59, 99 i 

Od. Nat. 114. 
ranfack'd, P. L. i. 6S6. 
ranfom, P. L. iii. 221, x. 6l, 

xii. 424; S. A. 483, 604> 

1460, 1471, 1476, 1573. 
ranfWd, P. L. iii. 297. 
rapacious, P. L. xi. 258. 
rape, P. L. i. 505, ii. 794, xi. 

717; Orf. D.F.I. 9^ 



VERBAL INDEX, 



Kaphael, P. L. v. 221, 224, 

56l, vi. 363, vii. 40, viii. 64, 

217, xi. 235. 
rapid, P. L. ii. 532, i'v. 227, vi. 

711. 
rapine, P. L. ix. 46 1 ; Son. xv. 

14. 
rapt, P. L. iii. 522, vii. 23, xi. 

706\ 853 ; P. R. ii. 40 ; II 

Pen/. 40 ; Com. 794. 
rapture, P. L. v. 147, vii. 36, 

299, ix. 1082 ; 0</. Nat. 98. 
raptures, P. L. iii. 369 ; Com. 

247. 
rare, P. X. ii. 948, iii. 21, 6l2, 

vi. 353, vii. 46*1, xi. 610; 

P. R. ii. 186; 17 Pen/. 101. 
rarely, P. L. xii. 537 ; S. A. 

1047. 
rarer, S. A. 166. 
rafe, P. L. ii. 923. xii. 53. 
ras'd, P. X. i. 362, iii. 49. 
rafh, P. L. v. 851, ix. 780, 860, 

xii. 76; P. R. I 359, iv. 8; 

5. ^4. 747 ; Com. 397. 

too rafh, S. A. 907. 
rafhly, S. A ,43. 
raihnefs, P. L. xii. 222. 
rate, S. A. 1313. 
rathe, Lye. 142. 
rather, P. L. i. 63, 482, 606, 

ii.47,00, 149, 252, iii. 7,51, 

599, 697, iv. 236, v. 829, vi. 

166, viii. 54, 75, ix. 332, 

694,773,619,902,969,979, 
1167, x. 494, 884, 1026, xi. 
166, 503, 548, xii. 219 ; 
P. P. i. 74, 326, 418, ii. 144, 
396, iii. 162, 174, 218, 402, 
iv. 183,207,316,338,444; 
S. A. 216, 421, 66l, 828, 
1118, 1154, 1478, 1517; 
Com. 412 ; Vac. Ex. 29; Pf. 
Ixxxiv. 38. 

ratioiial, P. L. ii. 498, v. 409, 
viii. 391, 587, xii. 82. 

rattling, P. L. ii. 715, vi, 546, 

rave, Od. Nat. 67. 



ravel, S. A. 305. 
raven, P. L. xi. 855. 
raven-down, Com. 251, 
ravenous, P. L. x. 274, 637, 

991 ; P. R- ». 269. 

ravens, P. P. ii. 267. 
raves, Vac. Ex. 43. 
ravin, P. L. x. 599- 
ravifhment, P. X. ii. 554, v. 46, 

ix. 541 ; Com. 245. 
ray, P. L. iii. 24, 620, iv. 673, 

v. 141, vi. 480, viii. 140, ix. 

607 ; Com. 622. 
rays, P. L. iii. 625, iv. 543, r. 

301, vi. 719, vii. 372; Com. 

425 ; Od. Nat. 223. 
razor, S.A. 1167. 
reach, P. L. ii. 606, i v. 801, v. 

571, vii. 75, ix. 591, 593, 

732, 779, x. 323, 793, xi. 94, 

380, xii. 44, 556 5 S.A. 62, 

1380 ; Pf. exxxvi. 94. 
reached, P. L. iv. 988, v. 213, 

vi. 131. 
reaches, P. L. iii. 697* 
reaching, P. X. ii. 1P29, vi. 

140. 
read, P. L. i. 798, ii. 422, iv. 

1011, viii. 68; P. R. i. 207, 

iv. 116,382. 
reads, P. P. iv. 322. 
readied, P. L. ii. 976,xii. 216; 

P. P. iii. 128; Com. 305; P/. 

lxxxvi. 54. 
readily, P. X. viii. 272. 
readinefs, P. P. ii. 144. 
reading, P. P. iv. 323. 
re-admit, S.A. 1173. 
ready, P. L. ii. 854, iii. 72, 

650, v. 132, vi. 54, 509, 56l, 

ix. 626; S. A. 1483; Od. 

Nat. 49 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 62. 
reaking. See reeking, 
real, P. L. v. 437, viii. 310, ix. 

699, x. 151, 413; P. R. iv. 

390;^.^. 159. 
realities, P. X. viii. 575. 
realm, P. X. i. 342, 409, ii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



133, 972, 1005, iv. 234, viii. 
375, x. 189, 391, 392, 435, 
xi. 400, xii. 162, 455 ; P. R. 
i. 118, iv. 72; Brut. 8. 

realms, P. L. i. 85, iv. 1002, 
vi. IS6 X vii. 147; P.R. ii. 
422, 453. 

realty, P. L. vi. 115. 

reap, P. L. ii. 339; & -4. 96G. 

reap'd, P. L. xi. 431. 

reaper, P. £. xi. 434. 

reapers, P. -L. ix. 482. 

reaping, P. £. ii i - 67, xii. 18. 

rear, P. L. ii. 78, v. 589, ix. 
497; S. A. 1577; L'^/. 50. 

rear, (verb) P. L. xi. 278, 
323 ; S. A. 555. 

rear'd, P. L. i. 464, iv. 699, v. 
653 r viii. 3l6, xi. 758 ; P. P. 
ii. 285, iv. 546; Com. 798, 
836 ; Son. xvi. 6. 

rears, P. L. i. 221. 

re-afcend, P. L. i. 633, iii. 20, 
xii. 480. 

reafon, P. L. i. 248, ii. 114, 
121, 431, iii. 108, iv. 389, 
755, 895, v. 102, 106, 487, 
794, vi. 41, 42, 120, 125, 
126, vii. 508, viii. 374, 443, 
510, 554, 591, ix. 113, 239, 
243, 352, 360, 559, 600, 
654, 738, 1130, xii. 84, 86, 
89, 9% 98 ; P. R- ii- 485, 
iii. 122, iv. 526; S. A. 322, 
323, 1546, 1641; Son. i. 12. 

reafon, (verb) P. L. viii. 374; 
P. P. iv. 233. 

rcafon'd, P. L. ii. 558. 

reafoning, P. L. viii. 25, 85, ix. 
379, 872. 

reafonings, P. L. x. 830; S. A. 
322, 875. 

reafonlefs, P- L. iv. 5l6; S. A. 
812, 

reafon's, P. L. ii. 226; Com. 
529, 756. 

reafons, P. L. ix. 765 ; S. A. 
811, 864; Cow. 162. 



re-aflembling, P. L. i. 1$£ 
re-aiTum'd, P. L. x. 225. 
rebecks, L'^/. 94. 
rebel, P. X. i. 38, 484, iii. 677 f 

iv. 823, vi. 199, 647, x. 83 ; 

Pf. ii. 12. 
rebell'd, P. L. vi. 179, 737, 

899; P/v. 32. 
rebellion, P. X. i. 363, v.. 715, 

vi. 269, xii. 36, 37; S. A. 

1210. 
rebellions, Son. xv. 16. 
rebellious, P. L. i. 71, 747, ii. 

691, iii. 86, iv. 952, vi. 50, 

414, 786, vii. 140. 
rebels, P. L. v. 742. 
rebounding, P. L. x. 417. 
rebounds, P. L. i. 788. 
rebuff, P. L. ii. 936. 
rebuke, P. L. iv. 844, vi. 342, 

ix.!0;P.P.i.468;P/:ixxx, 

08. 
rebuilt, P. R. iii. 281. 
recall, P. L. v. 835. 
recall, (verb) P. L. iv. 95, ix. 

926; P. R. ii. 55. 
recall'd, P. L. i. 169, xi. 330, 

422. 
recalling, P. jR. ii. 106. 
recant, E. L. iv. g6. 
receive, P. L. i. 252, ii. 218, 

240, iii. 106, 252, 294, iv. 

384, 672, v. 315, 690, 781, 

vi. 55, 75, 152, 188, 349, 

561, vii. 78, 179, 36l, viii. 

343, ix. 284, 309, 350, x. 

639, xi. 37, 505, 707, xii. 

322, 462, 503; P. R. i. 77, 

iii. 231, iv. 200; S. A. 329, 

468, 473, 883, 1214. 
receiv'd, P. L. i. 174, iii. 6l, 

iv. 54, 309, v. 248, vi. 22, 

721,805,875, 891, vii. 119, 

viii. 96, 386, x. 750, xi. 636, 

xii. 609; P.R. iii. 137, iv. 

263, 623; Com. 684; Son. 

xxiii. 3 ; Dante 1. 3 ; Pf. cxir* 

10. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



receives, P. L. ii. 439, v. 423, 

487, vi. 624, viii. 35, 89, xii. 

137; P. -R. iii. 117, iv. 288. 
receiv'ft, P. L. ix. 109. 
receiving, P. R. iv. 566. 
receptacle, P. L. vii. 307, xi. 

123. 
reception, P. L. v. 769, x. 807; 

P. R. iii. 205. 
recefs, P. L. i. 795, ii. 254, iv. 

258, 708, ix. 456, xi. 304; 

P. P. iv. 242. 
reciprocal, P. L. viii. 144; Ep. 

Hobf. H. 30. 
reck, P. L. ix. 173. 
reck'd, P. L. ii. 50. 
reckon, P. L. viii. 71 ; S. A. 

170. 
reckon'd, Pf. lxxxviii. 13. 
reckons, Son. xvii. 14. 
reckon'ft, P. £. ii. 696. 
reckoning, Lye. 116; Com. 642. 
recks, Lye. 122 ; CW*. 404. 
reclaim, P. L. vi. 791* 
recline, P. L. iv. 333. 
recoil, P. L. ii. 880; Cow, 593; 

Pf. cxiv. 9. 
recoil'd, P. L. ii. 759, vi, 194, 

391. 
recoils, P. L. iv. 17, ix. 172. 
recollecting, P. L. i. 528. 
recollects, P. L. ix. 471. 
re-comforted, P. L ix. 918. 
recommend, P. L. iv. 329; 

P.P. i. 301. 
rccompence, P. L, ii. 981, iv. 

47, v. 424, viii. 5, ix. 994, 

995 t 1163; P. P. iii. 128, 

132 ;S. ^.910; Lye. 184. 
recompenfe, (verb) P. X. iv. 

893, x. 683; S. A. 74,6. ^ * 
recompensed, P. L. x. 1052,'xii. 

495. 
reconcil'd, P. L. xi. 39 ; P. P. 

iv. 413 ; S. A. 962. 
reconcilement, P. L. iii. 264, 

iv. 98, x.943; 5. A. 752. 
record, Sow. xviii. 5. 



recorded, P. L. v. 594, vii f 

338 ; 5. A. 984. 
recorders, P. L. i. 551. 
records, P. L. i. 36l, xii. 252, 

513. 
recover, S. A. 1555. 
recover'd, P. L. i. 240, ii. 22, 
iv. 357, v. 210; P. R. i. 3 ; 
6'. ^. 1098. 
recovering, P. L. x. 966, xi. 

294, 499. 
recount, P. L. vii. 112; P. P- 

iii. 64. 
recounted, P. L. x. 228. 
recreant, P. P. iii. 138. 
recure, P. L. xii. 393. 
red, P. L. i. 175, ii. 174, iv. 
978; Od. Nat. 159, 230; 
Pf. vi. 22. 
Red-fea, P. L. i. 306; P. P. iii. 

438. 

redeem, P. X. iii. 214, 281, 

299, 300, xi. 258 ; Od. Nat. 

153. 

redeem'd, P. L. iii. 260, xi. 43. 

Redeemer, P. L. x. 6l, xii. 

445, 573. 
redeems, P. L. xii. 424, 434. 
redemption, P. L. iii. 222, xii. 
408; P. P. i. 266; S. A. 
1482 ; Orf. Nat. 4. 
without redemption, P. L. v. 
615. 
redouble, P. L. ix. 562. 
redoubled, P. L. vi. 370; 5. ^. 

923 ; -Sow. xviii. 9. 
redound, P. L. iii. 85, ix. 128, 

x. 739. 
redounded, P. L. vii. 57' 
redounding, P. X. ii. 889. 
redounds, P. L. v. 438. 
redrefs, P. L. ix. 219; P/. 

lxxxii, 26. 
reduce, P. L. ii. 96 t 983, iii. 

320, x. 748, xii. 89- 
redue'd, PL. i. 790, v. 843, 
vi. 514, 777 \ x. 438 ; P. £. 
iii. 158; S.A, 1468. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



redundant, P. L. ix. 503 ; S. A. 

568. 
reed, P. L. v. 23, vi. 519, o~9> 

vii. 321, xi. 132; Com. 345. 
reeds, P. L. vi. 582; P. P. ii. 

26 ; Lye. 86. 
re-edify, P. L. xii. 350. 
reeking, P. L. viii. 256. 
reel, P/*. lxxxiii. 51. 
re-embattled, P. i. vi. 794. 
re-enter, P. L. ii. 397. 
lifer, 5. ^. 1015. 
refin'd, P. L. v. 475, xi. 63, xii. 

548. 
refines, P. L. viii. 58p. 
refle&ed, P. 1. iii. 723, iv. 596. 

x. 1071. 
reflecting, P. L. vi. 18. 
reflection, P. L. iii. 428, vii. 367. 
re-flourifhes, S. A. 1704. 
reflux, P. L. x. 73.9- 
reform, P. L. iv. 625. 
reforming, P. L. x. 101. 
refrain, £. A. 1565. 
refrain d, P. L. vi. 360. 
refrains, Son. xxi. 14. 
Jefrefh'd, P. L. ix. 1027; P. P. 

iv. 591, 637. 
refreshings, S. A. 665. 
refrefhment, P. L. ix. 237; 

P. P. ii. 263 ; Com. 687- 
reft, L3/C. 107. 
refuge, P. L. ii. 168, ix. 119, 

x. 839, xi. 673. 
refulgent, P. L. vi. 527- 
refufal, P. P. ii. 323; S. A. 

1330. 
refufe, P. L. ii. 451, v. 492, vi. 

41, xii. 31; P. P. ii. 329. 
refus'd, P. L. ii. 470, 471, iv. 

743, x. 756; P. P. i. 277, iv. 

496. 
refuting, P.L.ii. 452. 
refute, P. P. iv. 23 ;. 
refuted, 8. A. V22<) 
refutes, P. L. x. 101 6. 
regain, P. P. i. . r >, ii. 230, iv, 

605, x. 972; P. R. \U 441, 



iii. 163, 371 ; S. A. 1004 - 

Com. 274. 
regained, P. P. i. 270, iv. 197 ; 

P. R. iv, 608. 
regal, P. L. i. 640, ii. 515, iii. 

339, 340, iv. 869, v. 280, 

739, 816, x. 447, xii. 323; 

P.P. ii. 183, 340,461, iii. 

248, 249, iv. 98; Od. PaJJ\ 

15. 
regard, P. L, i. 653, ii. 281, 

iii. 534, iv. 620, 877, x. 866, 

xi. 334, xii. l6; P.P. ii, 

315, iii. 217; S. A. 684 ; 

Com. 620. 
regard, (verb) P. L. v. 44, xii. 

174, 357; P. P. iii. 427; 

S. A. 1333 ; Pf. lxxxii. 9, 

lxxxviii. 22. 
regarded, P. L. ix. 787. 
regardlefs, P. L. iii. 408, xii. 

47; P. P. iv. 317; S. A~ 

303. 
regards, S. A. 1157* 
regencies, P. L. v. 748. 
regenerate, P. L. xi. 5. 
regent, P. L. iii. 690, v. 697 ? 

698, vii. 371, ix. 60. 
regents, P.R. i. 117. 
regiment, P. L. i. 758. 
region, P. L. i. 242, ii. 443, 

619, 982, iii. 433, 562, vi. 

80, vii. 425, ix. 1125; P.R. 

H. 117, 155; Od.Nat. 10& 
regions, P. L. i. 65, iii. 349, 

606, v. 263, 748, 750. vi„ 

223, xi. 77; P. P. i. 22, 392, 

iv. 67 ; Com. 4 ; P«c. £*. 41. 
rcgifter'd, P. L. xii. 335. 
re-gorg'd, S. A. 1671. 
regret, P. P. x. 1018. 
regular, P. L. v. 623. 
Regulus, P. P. ii. 446. 
rcjed, P. £. iv. 523, v. 886 ; 

P. P. iv. 467; S. A. 5l6 r 

760. 
rejected, P. I. x. 567, 876; 

P. P. iv. 376. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



reign, (fubft.) P. L. i. 102, 543, 
ii. 963, v. 609, 841, vii. 381, 
xii. 330, 370 ; P.R. i. 125, 
ii. 123, 442; iii. 178, 179, 
184, 216; IlPenf 25; Od. 
Nat. 106. 
reign, P. L. i. 26l, 262, 263, 
ii. 324, 451 < 698, 868, iii. 
315, 318, iv. 112, 961, v. 
820, 832, vi. 183, 293, 888, 
x. 375, 399, xL 543, xii. 91* 
286; P. Jt. iii. 180, 195, 215, 
385, 404, iv. 492 ; Vac. Ex. 
75 ; Brut. 3. 
reign'd, P. L. i. 514, v. 341, 

449, 578, xi. 751. 
reign'ft, Pf. lxxxiv. 45. 
reigning, P. L. i. 124 ; P. it. 

ii. 480. 
reigns, P. L. i. 497, 637, ii- 59, 
454, 814, 909, iv. 765, v. 41, 
680, vi. 43, x. 549, xi. 187; 
P. R. ii. 466, 478 ; Com. 334. 
rein, P L. xi. 586. 
rein'd, P. L. iv. 858. 
reinforcement, P. L. 1. 190* 
reins, P. L. vi. 346, 696, x. 672 ; 
S.A. 302, 609, 1578; Pf. 
vii. 39. 
re-infpire, Son. xx. 6. 
re-inftal, P.R. iii. 372, iv. 6l5 ; 

Od. D.F.I. 46. 
rejoice, P. L. ii. 339, viii.392, 
639,x.396,xi. 875, xii.475; 
S.A. 1455; P/. lxxxv. 23, 
Ixxxvi. 10. 
rejoic'd, P. L. ii. 848, v. 851, 
vi. 878; x. 120, xi. 869; 
P. R. i. 228, ii. 37. 
rejoicing, P. L. ii. 487, iv. 13, 
v. 163, 641, vii. 180,viii. 314. 
reiterated, P. L. i. 214. 
relapfe, P. L. iv. 100 ; P. it. 

ii. 30. 
relate, P. L. 1. 746, v. 564, vi. 
298, 373, vii. 84, 604, viii. 9, 
204, 208, xi. 319, xii. 11; 
Son, x. 12, 



related, P. L. ir. 875, v. 94; 

S. A. 786. 
relater, P. I». viii. 52. 
relating, P. L. viii. 51, 203. 
relation, P. L. v. 556, viii. 247; 
P.RAi. 182, iv, 519 ;S.^* 
1595 ; Com. 617* 
relations, P. L. iv. 756. 
relax, P. L. vi. 599. 
relax'd, P. L. ix. 891. 
released, P. L. xi. 197. 
releafe, P.RA. 409 ; Otf. JW. 6. 
relent, P. i. ii. 237, iv. 79, vi, 

790, x. 1093; S.A, 409. 
relented, P. L. x. 940. 
relentlefs, P. L. ix. 130. 
relents, P. X. xi. 891. 
relief, P. L. x, 976 5 P. it. ii. 

309; Son A. 12. 
relied, P. L. vi. 238. 
relies, P.L. ii. 41 6. 
relieve, P. #. i. 344. 
relieves, S. A. 5, 460, 472* 
religion, P. L. xi. 667, xii. 535; 

£. ^.412, 854, 872, 1420; 

Son. xvii, 13. 
religions, P. LA. 372. 
religious, P. X. xi. 622, xii. 

231; S.A. 1320; 2/ Pen/. 

160. 
reliques, P. L. iii. 491, v. 273; 

Ep. W. Sh. 3. 
relifh, P. L. ix. 1024. 
reluctance, P. i. ii. 337, x. 

1045. 
reludant, P. £. iv. 311, vi. 58. 

x.515. 
rely, P. L. ix. 373; Pf. lxxxiv. 

47. 
remain, P. L. ii. 320, iii. 124, 

263, v. 773, vi. 115, 116, x. 

989 ; P. R. ii. 255 ; Pf. lxxxi. 

63. 
remain'd, P. L. ii. 768, vii. 504, 

ix. 464, 808, 1138 ; P. R. ii. 

1, 243, 404. 
remaining, S. A. 587? 1549; 

Com. 72, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



remains, P. L. i. 139, 64-5, ii. 

443, vi. 38, vii. 21, viii. 13, 

ix. 43, X. 129, 502, xii. 14; 

P. P. iv. 326' ; S. A. 433, 

649,912, 1126; Son. xvi.9; 

Ep. Hobf. II. 34. 
remark, S. A. 1309. 
remarkable, S. A. 1388. 
remarkably, P. L. ix. 982; 

P.P. ii. 106. 
remedilefs, P.P.ix. 919; S.A. 

648; CM. Cir. 17- 
remedy, P. P. vi. 438, x. 1079, 

xi. 62. 
remember, P. L. iv. 449, vi. 

912, viii. 327, x. 1046; P.P. 

i. 46, iii. 66, iv. 374. 
remember'd, P. L. x. 12 ; S. A. 

677- 
remembereft, P.P. lxxxviii.21. 
remembering, P. L, xii. 346; 

P. P. iii. 434. 
remember'ft, P. P. v. 674, 857, 

vii. 56l. 
remembrance, P. L. iii. 704, iv. 

38, viii. 204; S. A. 277, 952; 

Pf vi. 9. 
remembreft, P/I viii. 12. 
remifs, P. L. vi. 458, viii. 387- 
remiflion, S. A. 835. 
remit, P. L. ii. 210, xi. 885; 

S. A. 687, 1470. 
remorfe. P. P. i. 605, iv. 109, 

v. 134, x. 1098 ; S. A. 752, 

1007. 

without remorfe, P.P. v. 566, 
xi. 105. 
remorfelefs, Lye. 50 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 29. 
remote, P. L. ii. 477, iii- 609, 

iv. 284, vi. 173, vii. 36*9, viii. 

191, ix. 812, x. 274; P.P. 

iii. 76. 
rcmoteft, Son. xv. 4. 
remove, (fubft.) P. L. xii. 593. 
remove, P. L. ii. 277, vi. 597, 

viii. 119, xL 96 j 260, xii. 

204, 290. 



remov'd, P.L. i. 73, ii. tit, 

32], 835, iii. 356, vii. 272* 

x. 211, 934, xi. 3, 412, 727, 

889 ; P. P. iv. 87 ; Pf. lxxxv. 

9 ; Ixxxviii. 69. 
removed, 11 Penf 78. 
removes, P. X. ix. 702. 
rend, P. P. x. 700, xii. 182. 
rend up, P. L. ii. 540. 
render, P. L. ii. 130, 459, vi. 

602, viii. 6, ix. 823; P. P. 

iii. 130; S.A. 1232. 
render back, P. P. x. 7^9* 
render'd, Pf. vii. 11. 
renders, P. P. viii. 196 ; S. A. 

1282. 
rendering, P. P. xi. 551. 
renew, P. P. ii. 494, iii. 175; 

Od. Sol. Muf. 25 ; Pf. lxxxv.- 

28. 
renew'd, P. P. ii. 1012, iii. 226, 

vi. 783, viii. 337, ix. 321, 

1133, x. 543, 638, xi. 66, 

116, 140, 499 ; P. P. ii. 367, 

iii. 6, 346; S. A. 520, 1357- 
renewing, P. L. iii. 729 ; P. P. 

iv. 570. 
renews, P. L. ii. 389 ; #• A. 

331. 
renovation, P. X. xi. 65. 
renounce, P. P. ii. 312, iii. 291 , 

ix. 884 ; S. A. 828. 
renoune'd, Fore, of Con. 2. 
renown, P.P. i. 477, iii. 34, vi. 

378, 422, xi. 68S, 69S, xii. 

154; P.R. i. 136, iv. 8.4; 

Pf exxxvi. 62. 
renown'd, P. L. i. 507, iii. 465, 

549, ix. 440, 670, 1101, xii. 

321; P. R.iv.*6;S.A. 125, 

341, 988, 1079; Arc. 29; 

Son. xvi. 11 ; Pf. lxxxi. 32^ 
repaid, P. L. ix. 178, 1015, £ 

218; P. P. iv. 188. 
repair, (fubft.) P. L. viii. 457, 
repair, P. L. i. 188, iii. 67$, 

vii. 152, xi. 144; P. P. iv 

267; S.A. 665. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



tepair'd, P. X. iv. 773, vi. 878 ; 

P.P. iv. 591. 
repairing, P. X* vii. 365, x. 

1087, 1099. 
repairs, Lye. 169. 
repaft, P. X. ii. 800* v. 232* 

630, viii. 214, ix. 4, 403* 

407 ; Cow. 688 ; Son. xx. 9* 
frepeal'd, P* X. vii. 59. 
repeat, P. X. vi. 318, ix. 946. 
repeated, P. X. vi. 601 , vii. 494, 

viii. 32, ix. 400; S.A. 645; 

Son. viii. 12. 
repel, P. L. viii. 643, ix. 284. 
repell'd, P. X. vii. 6ll, x. 866; 

P. P. iv. 446; Son. xvii. 3. 
repent, P. X. i> 96, iii. 190, iv. 

93, xi. 255, xii. 474 ; S. A. 

504. 
repentance, P. L. iii. 191, iv. 

80, xi. 724; P. R. i. 20; 

S.A. 821. 
repentant, P. X. xi. 1 ; P. R. 

iii. 435; S.A. 751. 
repenting, P. X. ii. 369 , x. 75, 

xi. 886 ; 507?. xxi. 6. 
repents* P. X. xi. 90. 
repine, P. X. vi. 460; P. R> ii. 

94. 
repines, 5. A. 995. 
replenifh'd, P. X. vii* 447, viii. 

371. 
replete, P. L. ix.733, xii. 46S. 
replied, P. X. i. 156, ii. 688* 

746, iii. 167, 273, 440, iv. 

659, 857, 903, 946, 969, v. 

468,506, 852, vi. 171,469, 

viii. 4,65, 179, 368,378, 595, 

ix. 272, 290, 342, 377, 567 , 

614,655,960, ll6'2,x. 118, 

124, 144, 16 1> 602, 966 , 

1012, Xi. 370, 453, 552, 

xii. 468, 552, 573 ; P. R. i. 

337, ii. 319, 37S, 432, iii. 

43, 108, 121, 203, iv. 109, 

285, 367, 499; Lye. 77 ; Pj\ 

iii. 11. 
replies, Son, six. 9^ 



reply, P. X* ii* 467, 1010, viii. 

209, ix. 321 ; P. Pt. iii. 3, 

iv. 2. 
report, P. L. iii. 701, v. 869 ; 

S.A, 117, 1090 ; Son.x. 8* 
report, (verb) Pi L. xii. 237 > 

S. A. 1350; Com. 127. 
reported, P. X. vi* 26. 
repofe* P. X. iv. 6l2, v. 28, 

233 3 ix. 403, 407; P. P. iii. 

210; Si A. 406. 
repoi'e, (verb) P. X. i. 319. 
repos'd, P.X. iv. 450, v. 636. 
repofes, Com. 999' 
repoflefs, P. X. i. 634. 
reprehend, P/* vi* 1. 
reprefent, P. L. v. 104, xi. 870. 
repreiented, P. X. x. 849* 
reprefenting, P. L. viii. 6l0, 

xii. 255; P.R. i. 418* 
reprefs, S. A. 543. 
reprieve, S.A. 288. 
reproach, P. L. vi. 34, xi. 165* 

811; P.R. iii. 66; 6'. ^. 

353,446,823; Od. D.F.I. 

14. 
reproach, (verb) P. X. ix. 1098* 
reproaches, P. P. iv. 387 ; S.A. 

393. 
reproachful, P*X. xii* 406. 
reprobate, P. X* i. 697; P, & 

i, 491 ; S. A. 1685. 
reprov'd, P. X. x. 761. 
reptile, P. X. vii. 388. 
repulfe, P. L. 1. 630, vi. 600, 
• ix. 384; P.P. iv.623; £. A. 

966. • 
repulfe upon repulfe, P. P. if* 

21. 
repuls'd, P. X. ii. 142, x. 10, 

910 ; P. P.i.6; 5.^. 1006 ', 
: Pf. lxxxiii. 28. 
repute, P. L. i. 639, "• 472. 
•requelt, P. X. v. 56l, vi. 894, 

vii. Ill, 635,xi. 46,47;^.^. 

356, 881; Com. 900. 
requeit, (verb) P. X, x. 743 ; 

£p. M. Win. \7. 



vol. 1, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



requeued, 5. A. 1630. 
require, P. L. iv. 628, v. 408, 

ix. 590; P. JR. ii. 412, iii. 

17; S.A. 1314. 
requir'd, P. L. iv. 308. 
requires, P. L. iii. 735, iv. 419, 

v. 529, viii. 425, 642 ; P. P. 

iii. 113, 117. 
requifite, P. P. i. 464. 
requital, Com. 6*26. 
requite, S.^. 1356; -Sow. viii. 5. 
re-falute, P. L. xi. 134. 
refcue, P/! vii. 6, lxxxii. 14. 
refcucd, P. L. xi. 682, xii. 199. 
refcmblance, P. L. iv. 364, v. 

114, vi. 114, ix. 538; P.P. 

iv. 320 ; Com. 69. 
refembles, P. L. ii. 26s, v. 622. 
refemblcff, P. L. iv. 839- 
refembling, P. L. ii. 1045, viii. 

543; P. P. iii. 110. 
refent, P. L. ix. 300. 
referve, P. L. v. 6l ; P. P. iv. 

165. 
referv'd, P. L. i. 54, ii. l6l, 

332, v. 128, viii. 50, ix. 76'8, 

xi. 501. 
refervingr, P. L. xii. 71. 
refide, P. L. ii. 265, 957, xii. 

284; Pf. lxxxiv. 17- 
refidence, P. L. i. 734, ii. 999', 

viii. 346; Com. 248, 947- 
refutes, P.X. viii. 112. 
refkling, P. L. x. 607, xii. 114. 
refign, P. X. vi. 731, x. 148, 

749, xi. 287, xii. 301 ; So?i. 

xiv. 3 ; Vac. Ex. 58. 
rcfign'd, P. R. i. 27- 
rciigns, P. L. iii. 688, xi. 66. 
refill, P. LA. 162, ii. 192, 814, 

iv. 1013, vi. 323, xii. 491 ; 

P.P. i. J51;6'.^.830, 1753. 
refinance, P. L. vi. 838. 
renftlefs, P. L. ii. 6*2 ; P. R. iv. 

268; S.^f. 1404. 
refolvo, P. L. i. 120, viii. 14, 

ix. 830; Son. xxi. 5. 
refolv'd, P. X,. i. 662, ii. 201, 



392, v. 668, ix. 97,585*968, 

x. 1038; P. P. iv.444;6\^. 

305, 408, 1390. 
refolving, P. L. xii. 109; Cow. 

183. 
refoluteft, P. P. ii. 167. 
refolution, P. L. i. 191 , ii. 468, 

vi. 541, ix. 907, x. 1029; 

S.J. 732, 1344, 1410. 
reformat, P. L. xi. 563. 
refort, P. R. i. 367; S. A. 1738 ; 

IlPenf. 81 ; Com. 379, 952. 
reforting, P. Z. xi. 81. 
rcfound, P. i. iii. 149, v. 178, 

x. 862, xi. 592. 
refounded, P. L. i. 315, ii. 789, 

vi. 218, vii. 56l. 
refounding, P. R. ii. 290; Od. 

Nat. 182. 
refounds, P. L. i. 5/9, viii. 334; 

Son. xvi. 8. 
refpeft, P. R. iv. 521 ; S. A. 

316, 333. 
refpeds, 5. A. 86S. 
refpiration, P. L. xii. 540. 
refpirc, S.A. 11. 
refpite, (fubft.) P.L. xi. 272; 

Com. 553. 
refpite, P. L. ii. 46l, v. 232. 
refplcndence, P. L. v. 720. 
rcl'plendent, P. L. iii. 36l, iv. 

723, ix. 568, x. 66. 
refponiive, P. L. iv. 683. 
reft, (fubft.) P.L. i. 66, ii.6l8, 

802, iv. 6ll,6l3, 617, v. 11, 

647, vi. 272, 415, vii. 91, ix. 

1120, x. 1085, xi.375, xii. 

257, 314, 401, 647; S.A. 

406; Com. 689 ; if. M. Win. 

50; Brut. 4: Pf. lxxxiv. 

10. 
reft, (adj.) P.L. i. 507, 589, 

671, ii. 54, 455, iii. 184, 185, 

721, iv. 547, 900, vi. 162, 

662, vii. 240, 492, 510, viii. 

71, 105, ix. 564, 653, x. 296, 

422, 532, 1008, xi. 710, xii. 

112, 260,533, 585 ', P. ii. ii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



233, iv. 48, 86, 344, 511 ; 

S.A. U70; Com. 629; Vac. 

Ex. 50. 
Fell, (verb) P.L. i.185, iv.633, 

v. 368, vi. 802, ix. 649, x. 

778, xii. 257, 401; P. P. ii. 

292; S.A. 459, 59$; L'Al. 

74 ; Coin. 36 1 ; Son. xiv. 13, 

xxi. 7 ; iy. lxxxiv. 48. 

at reft, Od. Nat. 21 6. 

without reft, Son. xix. 13. 
refted, P. L. vii. 595. 
retting, P. L. i. 237, vii. 592, 

593. 
reftlefs, P. I. ii. 526, viii. 31 ; 

S.A. 19; Pf. lxxxiii. 51. 
rcftorative, P. ii. ii. 273. 
reftore, P. Z. i. 5, xi. 12, xii. 

623; P.R. iii. 381; S. A. 

1503 ; Com. 69O, 691 ; Pf. vi. 

7, lxxxv. 14. 
reftor'd, P. JE. iii, 288, 289, x. 

971, xii. 3; P. R. i. 220, 

405, ii. 36; S.A. 1528. 
reftorer, P. L. x. 646. 
reftrain'd, P. L. viii. 628, ix. 

868, xi. 498. 
reftraint, P. L. i. 32, iii. 87, ix, 

209, 1170, 1184. 

without reftraint, P. L. ix, 
791 ; Son. xxiii. 8. 
refts, P. L. iii. 389, v. 109, x, 

48 ; P. R. i. 39. 
refult, P. L. ii. 515, vi. 619. 
refume, P. L. i. 278, xii. 456; 

P.R. ii. 58. 
refum'd, P. L. x. 574. 
refumes, P. L. xii, 5. 
refurrection, P. L. xii. 436. 
retain, P. L. ii. 285, v. 501, vii. 

362, x. 532. 
retained, P. L. ix. 601. 
retaining, P. L. xi. 512. 
retains, P. L. vii. 146 ; Com. 

842. 
retinue, P. L. v. 355 ; P. K. ii. 

419. 
retire, (fuM.) P. L. xi, 267, 



retire, P. L. ii. 686, 1038, vii, 
170, ix. 810, xi. 237, xii. 
535; P.JR. ii.40, 161; S.A, 
106l ; Com. 656. 

rctir'd, P. Z. ii. 557 h iv. 532, 
611, v. 231, vi. 307, 338, 
409, 570, 781, viii. 41, 504, 
ix. 537, x. 423 ; P. JR. iii. 
166, iv. 91 ; S. A. 253. 

retirement, P. L. ix. 250; 
P.R. iv. 245. 

retires, P. X. v. 108, x. 423. 

retiring, P. L. x. 378; P. ik 
ii. 106, iii. 164. 

retort, P. L. x. 761. 

retorted, P. L. v. 906. 

retreat, P. L. i. 555, ii. 317* 
vi. 237, 799, x. 435. 

retreated, P. I/, ii. 547. 

retreating, P. L. xi. 854. 

retrenched, P. H. i. 454. 

retribution, P. jL. iii. 454. 

retrograde, P. £. viii. 127- 

return, (fubft.) P. L. iv. 42, vii. 
604, ix. 250, 399, 405, 839* 
844, xii. 541 ; P. R. i. 297, 
iii. 132, iv. 64, 438; Com, 
284. 

return, P. L. ii. 37, 335, 527, 
799, 839, iii. 41, 159, 26l, 
iv. 481, 534, v. 470, vi. 
39, 606, vii. 16, viii. 21, 
651, x. 54, 206, 20S, 253, 
770, 932, xi. 200, 463, 
534, 816, xii. 171,213, 219^ 
422; P. R. ii. 57, 115, 302„ 
iii. 129, iv. 374; S. A. 
517, 1332; Lye. 38, 132, 
133; Com. 194; Od. Nat. 
142; Pf. vi. 23, vii. 28, 
lxxx. 29, 57, 77, lxxxv. 10, 
35. 
returned, P. L. ii. 520, 736, 
iii. 693, iv. 463, 464, 57 '6 , 
590, v. 30, vi. 25, 187, vii. 
135, 552, 567, viii. 245, 285, 
337, ix. 57, 58, 67, 226, 278, 
401, x. 34, 224, 240, 341, 



pS 



VERBAL INDEX. 



346, 455, 462, 518, xi. 153, 

i>94, xii. 348; P. Ii. i. 318, 

324, 439, 467, ii. 61, 79, 

140, 172, iii. 181, iv.6'39. 
returned, Pf. lxxxv. 4. 
returning, P. L. vi. 879, ' x - 

850, xi. 859, xii. 6*32 ; P. P. 

iii. 130 ; S. A. 1004, 1355 ; 

Son. xix. 6\ 
returns, P. i. i. 140, iii. 41, iv. 

812, 906, v. 276, 845, viii. 

157; S.^. 1390, 1750; Com. 

670. 
return'it, P. L. vi. 151, xii. 

610. 
reveal, P. L. v. 570, xi. 113; 

S. A. 50, 383. 
reveal'd, P. L. vi. 895, vii. 71, 

122, viii. 177, xii. 151, 272, 

545; P. R. i. 307, ii. 50 ; 

5. ^.29, 491, 782, 800. 
reveals, P. P. i. 293. 
revellers, P. L. vii. 33. 
revelry, L'A/. 127 ; Cum. 103. 
revels, P. L. i. 782. 
revels^ (verb) P. X. iv. 7&> ; 

Com. 985. 
revenge, P. X. i. 35, 107, 604, 

ii. 105, 107, 128, 129, 337, 

371, 987, 1054, iii. 85, 160, 

iv. 123, 386, 390, vi. 151, 

905, ix. 16'8, 171, 466, x. 

242, 1036 ;£. ,4.484, 1591, 

1660. 
reveng'd, P. R. iv. 4 ; S. A. 

146'S, 1712. 
reverence, P. X. ii. 478, iii. 

738, v. 359, viii. 599, ix. 

835, 915, xi. 237 ; Arc. 37-^ 
reverence, (verb) P. X. xi. 346, 

525. 
reverencM, S. A. 1463. 
reverend, P. L. xi. 719; S. A. 

326, 1456, 1548 ; Lye. 103. 
reverent, P. X. iii. 349, x. 

1088, 1100; P. P.ii. 220. 
reverfe, P. X. vi. 326, xi. 41. 
revile, P. X. x. 118. 



reviling, P. JL x. 1048. 
revifit, P. X. ii. 13, 21. 
rev i fit' it, P. X. iii. 23. 
revive, P. L. i. 279, ii. 493, vi, 

493, xi. 871 ; Pf. lxxxv. 22. 
reviv'd, P. X. vi. 497, ix. 440 ; 

Com. 840. 
revives, P. X. xii. 420; S. Ac 

187, 1704. 
reviving, S. A. 1268. 
revoke, P. X. iii. 126. 
revokes, P. P. iii. 356. 
revolt, P. X. i. 33, 6*11, ii. 326, 

iii. 117, vi. 262, ix.7; P.P. 

i. 359. 
revolt, (verb) P. X. vi. 740; 

So?i. xii. 10. 
revolted, P. X. iv. 835, vi. 31, 

x. 534. 
revoltcr, S. A. 1180. 
revolve, P. P. i v. 281. 
revolv'd, P. L. vii. 381, ix. 88; 

P.P. i. 259; S.J. 1638. 
revolving, P. X. iv. 31 ; P. P. 

:. 185. 
revolution, P. X. viii. 31, x. 

814; Ej).IIobf.U.6. 
revolutions, P. X. ii. 597. 
reward, P. X. iii. 451, vi. 153, 

910, vii. 628, x. 767, xi. 

459, 709; P. P. iii. 87, 104; 

S. A. 1465. 
reward, (verb) P. X. xii. 4-6*1 . 
rewarded, S. A. 413. 
Rhea's, P. X. i. 513, iv. 279- 
Rhene, P. X. i. 353. 
rhetorick, P. R. iv. 4 ; Com. 790. 
rheums, P. X. xi. 488. 
rhime, or rhyme, P. X. i, l6j 

Lyc.U. 
Rhodope, P. L. vii. 35. 
rhomb, P. X. viii. 134. 
rhombs, P. P. iii. 309. 
rib, P. X. viii. 466, 469, ix, 

912, 1154, x. 884. 
ribs, P. X. i. 690, x. 512; Com, 

56*2. 
Fich, P,L, u 538, iii. 504, iv. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



189, 248,701, v. 355, 636, 
vii. 501, x. 292, xi. 407, 
793; P. R. ii. 352; S. A. 
722; Com. 22, 556; £p. M. 
Win. 1 ; Ztoe I. 2; Pf. 
lxxxiv. 39. 
richer, P. L. xi. 408. 
riches, P. L. i. 682, 691, xii. 
580; P. it. ii. 427, 449, 453, 
458, 484, iv. 298, 536*; Com. 
724,. 
richeft, P. L. ii. 3, x. 446; 
S. A. 1479; Orf. Pajf. 44; 
Vac. Ex. 21. 
richly, P. L. xi. 582; P. it. ii. 

340; IlPenf. 159. 
rid, P. L. vi. 737- 
riddance, P. L. iv. 632. 
riddle, P. K. iv. 573; S. A. 

1016, 1200. 
riddling, S. A, 1064. 
ride, P. L. i. 764, ii. 540, iv. 

974, x. 475. 
ride forth, P. L. vii. 166. 
riders, P. it. iii. 314; S. A. 

1324. 
rides, P. L. i. 769, ii. 930; 

S. A. 1538. 
ridge, P. L. iii. 432, vii. 293, 
x. 313, xii. 146, P.R. iv. 
29; S.A. 1137. 
ridges, P. L. vi. 236. 
ridiculous, P. L. xii. 62; P. It, 

iv. 342; S. 4. 539, 1501. 
riding, P.L. ii. 663. 
rid'ft, Com. 135. 
rife, P.L. i. 650; 5.4.866; 

Com. 203. 
rifled, P. £. i. 687. 
rift, P. it. iv. 411. 
rifted, S. A. 1621 ; CW. 578. 
rigg'd, S. 4. 200; Lye. 101. 
right, (fubit.) P. L. i. 150, 534, 
ii. 18, 231, iii. ill, iv. 881, 
v. 728, 794, 795, 815, vi. 43, 
452, 709, ix. 611, 676, x. 
76, 461, xii, 68, m ; P. ii. 



ii. 324, 325, 379, 3S0, iii. 
141, 154, 164, iv. 104; S.A. 
1056; Son. xv. 11; Pf vii. 
26, lxxxii. 5, 27, lxxxiii. 
46. 
right, (adj.) P. L. i. 247, iii. 
62, 98, 155, iv. 443, 541, vi. 
42, viii. 572, ix. 352, 570, 
x. 747, xi. 666 f xii. 16, 84 ; 
Pf. lxxxiv. 44, lxxxvi. 37. 
See hand, fide, 
right, (adv.) P. L. iv. 202, v. 
789, vi. 624, viii. 71; L'Al. 
59 ; Com. 854 ; Son. xxii. 9 ; 
Ep.Hobf.U. 21. 
right againft, P. L. i. 402 ; 

L'Al. 59. 
right before, P/I v. 24. 
right down, P. L. x. 398. 
right and left, P. L. vi. 558, 
m 569. 
right onward, P. L. vi. 831 ; 

Son. xxii. 9- 
righteous, P. L. i. 434, iii. 292, 
vi. 804, x. 30, 644, xi. 701 ; 
P. R. i. 206, 425; S. A, 
1276 ; Pf. lxxxi. 56. 
righteoufnefs, P. L. ix. 1056, 
x. 222, xi. 682, 814, xii. 
294, 550; Pf. iv. 2, 24, v. 21, 
vii. 32 ; Pf. Ixxxv. 43, 53. 
rightful, P. L. v. 818; 0</. C?>. 

17. 
rightlier, P. X. xi. 697', P. ii. 

ii. 123. 
rightlieft, P. it. iv. 475. 
rightly, P. i. vii. 2. viii. 439, 
xi. 159, xii. 418; Od. Sol. 
Muf 18. 
rights, Com. 125. 
rigid, P. L. iii. 212, vi. 83, viii\ 
334, ix. 685; S. A. 433; 
Com. 450. 
rigoroufly, P. X. xi. 109. 
rigour, P. X. x. 297, 803 ; Com. 

107. 
rill, P. £.iv. 229; iyc 24, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



rills, P. L. v. 6; Xyc. 186; 

Cow. 226. 
rime, Milton's Pre/, to P. L. 
Rimmon, P. L. i. 467. 
xind, P. P. i. 206, iv. 249, 335, 

v. 342 ; Com. 664- 
ring, UAL 93 ; CM. P^ 2 ; P/. 

lxxxi. 4. 
ring out, Od. Nat. 125. 
ringlets, P. P. iv. 306; Arc. 

47. 
rings, P. X. ii. 495; S. A. 1449; 

Son. xxii. 12. 
riot, P. P. i. 499, x. 521, xi. 

715 ; Com. 172. 
riotous, Com. 763, 
ripe, P. P. iv. 981, v. 323, xi. 

535, xii. 459; P> R> iii. 31, 

37; Com. 59, 296. 
ripen'd, <Scm. xiv. 2. 
ripenefs, «So?i. vii. 7. 
rife, P. L. i. 545, ii. 135, 296, iii. 

250, 296, iv. 664, v. 125, 1 85, 

188,289, 376, vi. 136, 285, vii. 

293, viii, l6l, 296, ix. 1123, 

x. 243, 647, 95S, xi. 828, 

Xii. 24, 326, 422; P. P. i. 

294; S. A. 1316; UAL 44; 

Arc. 54; Brut. 12; Pf. iii. 

3, 19, vii. 19, lxxxvi. 49. 
rife, rife, Corn. 885. 
rifen, P. P. i. 211, ii. 726, iv. 

624, v. 311, x. 555, 975, xii. 

630; P.P. ii. 127. 
rifes, P. P. xii. 56 ; Cowz. 306. 
nfing, P. P. ii. 15, 301, 476, 

iii. 11, 296, 551, iv. 405, 

607, 641, 651, v. 191, 715, 

725, vii. 102, 441, 468, ix. 

75, 498, 1070, x. 185, 663, 

xi. 665 ; P. R, i. 80, ii. 88, 

iii. 201 ; II Pen/. 73. 
rites, P.P. i. 390, 414, iv. 736, 

742, vii. 149, viii. 487, x. 

994, xi. 440, 591, xii. 231, 

244, 534; S. A. 1320, 137S; 

Com. 535. 
rivals, P. L i,472: S. A. 387. 



riven, P. P. vi. 449. 

river, P. L. ii. 583, iii. 358, iv, 

223, 276, ix. 74, 78, xi. 833, 

xii. 157,630; P. R. iv. 32 ; 

Com- 842 ; Pf. lxxx. 47. 
river-dragon, P. P. xii. 191. 
river-horfe, P. P. vii. 474. 
river's, P. P. ix. 514. 
rivers, P. P. i. 291, ii. 575, iii. 
. 607, iv. 806, vii. 305, 328, 

437, viii. 275, ix. 116, xii. 

176; P. P. iii. 255, 257, 334; 

UAL 76; Vac. Ex. 91. 
rivulet, P. P. ix. 420. 
road. P. P. iv. 976, v. 253, vii. 

373, 577, viii. 162, x. 394, 

6?2; P. P. i. 322, iv. 6S ; 

Od. Nat. 22. 
roam, P. P. iii. 476, iv. 538; 

P. P. i. 502. 
roam'd, P. P. i. 521, ix. 82. 
roaming, P. X, i. 382 ; P. P. ii. 

179. 
roar, (fubft.) P. P. vi. 586 ; 
P. P. iv. 428; Lye. 6l ; 

H Pew/. 76 ; Co?/?.. 549. 
roar, P. P. ij. 267, xi. 713 ; 

P. P. iv. 463; Com. 87; 

Ftfc. P*. 86. 
roar'd, P. P. vi. 871. 
rob, Con?. 390. 
robb'd, Cowi. 26l. 
robber, S. ^. 1180, 1188; Com. 

485. 
robe, P. P. ii. 543, ix. 105S, x. 

222 ; II Penf. 33. 
robed, L'Al.6\. 
robes, P. P. iv. 64; S. A. 

1188. 
rock, P. L. i. 450, ii. 181, 646, 

878, iv. 283, 543, vi. 364, 

vii. 300, x. 313, xi. 336, 

494; P. P. iv. 533; S. A. 

1398; Od. Pajj: 43; Pf 

lxxxi. 67. 
rocking, II Penf. 126. 
rocks, P. P. ii. 285, 540, 6^1, 

1018, v.759 t vi. 593 f 645, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vii. 35, 408, ix. 118, xi. 852; 

P. R. ii. 228; Com. 518; 

Son. xviii. 8. 
rocky, P. L. iv. 549, vi. 254; 

Pf iv. 41. 
rod, P. L. i. 338, v. 887, xi. 

133, xii. 198, 211, 212; 

S. A. 549; Com. 81 6'; Son. 

xiv. 7. 
rode, P. L. iv. 606, vi. 771, 

840, 88S, vii. 219, 557, ix. 

63, xi.747j P.P. ii. 17, iii. 

36*. 
rods, P. R. iv. 65. 
roll, P. L. iii. 23, v. 578, vi. 

57, viii. 19, x. 666, xi. 620; 

Ccmw; 77, 932 ; Pf. vii. 15. 
roll'd, P. L. i. 223, iii. 718, iv. 

593, vi. 594, 765, 829, 861, 

879, vii. 499, ix. 631, x. 558, 

xi. 749 ; Son. xviii. 7. 
rolling, P.P. i, 52, 324, 671, ii. 

873, iv. 16, 238, vii. 298, xi. 

460; P. P. iii. 86 
rolls, P. L. ii. 583, iii. 359, xii. 

183; P.R. iv. 249. 
Roman, P. R. i. 217, iii. 158, 

302. 
romance, P. L. i. 580. 
romances, P. P. iii. 339. 
Rome, P. P. ix. 510, 67 1, xi. 

405 ; P. R. iii. 385, iv. 45, 

SO, 91, iv. 360 ; Son. xvii. 3. 
Rome's, P. R. iv. 81. 
rood, P. L. i. 196. 
roof, P. L. i. 717, 726, ii. 644, 

iv. 692, 772, v. 137, 463, ix. 

1G38; S. A. 1634, 1651 ; 

Arc. 88 ; Od. Nat. 175 ; Od. 

D. F. I. 43. 
roofs, P. P. iv. 58. 
room, P. X. i. 779, ii. 835, iii. 

285, iv. 207, 359, 383, vii. 

190, 486, viii. 153, ix. 148, 

xii. 507 ; II Penf. 79 ', Od. 

Nat. 78 ; Vac. Ex. 58 ; Ep. 

Hobf. I. 15. 
roofts, S. A. 1693. 



root, P. L. ii. 383, iii. 288, v. 

479, ix. 6^5 ; Com. 62 j. See 

take, 
root, (verb) P. L. vi. 855 ; Pf. 

lxxx. 38. 
root-bound, Com. 662. 
rooted, P.P. iv. 417. 
roots, P. L. ii. 544, x. 299 ; 

P. R. i. 339; P/. lxxx. 54. 
rofe, (fubft.) iii. 43, iv. 256, 

v. 349, viii. 517, ix. 73, 74; 

Com. 74,3 ; Son. xx. 8. 
rofe, (verb) P.L. i. 10, 546\ 

711, ii. 301, 466, 475, iii. 43, 

iv. 229, 256, 355, 548, v. 48, 

349, vi. 207, 669, 746, vii. 

324, 385, 459, 472, viii. 44, 

517, ix. 73, 74, 1051,1059, 

x. 85,329,xi.738;P.P.iv. 

397 \ 565 ; Com. 190, 556. 
rofeat, P. L. v. 646. 
rofes, P. L. iii. 364, iv. 6g8, 

773, ix. 218, 426, 893 ; UAL 

22 ; Arc. 32; Com. 991 ; Od. 

Hor. 2. 
rofy, P. L. v. 1, vi. 3, xi. 175; 

Cow?. 885. 
rofy-bofom'd, Com. 9S6. 
rofy-red, P. L. viii. 619. 
rot, P. L. xii. 179; %c 127;' 

Ep. Hobf. II. 3. 
Rotherford, Fore, of Con. 8. 
rottennefs, Com. 598. 
rove, P. P. iv. 617, viii. 188, 

xi. 586; P.P. iii. 79; Vac. 

Ex. 23. 
rough, P. L. ii. 948, v. 342, 

vi. 108; P.R.i. 478; Lye. 

34 ; Com. 266 ; Od. Hor. 7. 
rougher, S.A. 1066. 
roving, P. L. ii. 6l4, iii. 342, 

viii. 189, ix. 575; P.R. i. 

33 ; Com. 60, 485 ; Od. Pajf. 

22. 
round, (fubft.) P. P. vii. 267, 

ix. 183 ; Com. 114 ; 01. Nat. 

192. 
round, (adj.) P. I. i. 2S5, ii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



832, 1048, iii. 419, 728, iv. 
1000, vi. 6, 484, x. 318. 
round, (verb) P. R. i. 365. 
round, (adverb) P. L. i. 56, 
6l, 340, 385, 617, 713, ii. 
266, 413, 435, 51 1, 602, 653, 
801, 86*2, 1015, iii. 426, 555, 
6lS, 628, 661, iv. 145, 302, 
401, 528,661, 979, v. 281, 
392, 419, 876, vi. 412, vii. 
27, 90, 229, 371, vjii. 23, 
26l, ix. 52, 103, 114, 216, 
426, 591, 636, 1096, x. 439, 
xi. 352, 381, 731, 824, xii. 
593; P.R. i.22, 295, ii. 286, 
297, iii. 418, iv. 422; S, A. 
194, 257, 451, 1430, 16.55; 
L'AL 70, 93; Arc. 15, 66; 
Com. 9o5; Od. Nat. 102, 
192 ; Vac. Ex. 31 ; Pf- lxxxi. 
12, 30, lxxxiv. 15, lxxxviii, 
27. 
round about, P. L. iii. 379> » v - 
2L, viii. 318, x. 448 ; S. A, 
1497 ; Vac. Ex. 63 ; Pf. iii. 
17, lxxxviii. 67. 
rounded, P. L. x. 684. 
rounding, P. L. iv. 685. 
rounds, P. L. viii. 125. 
roufe, P. L, i. 334, iii. 329 ; 
HAL 54; Com. 31S; P/. vii. 
20. 
rous'd, P. Z. i. 377, ii* 287; 

S. A. 1690. 
routing, S. A. 1382. 
rout, P. L. i. 747, ii- 770, 995, 
iv\ 3, vi. 387, 59S, 873, vii. 
34, x. 534 ; S. A. 443, 674 ; 
Lye. 6l ; Com. 533 ; Pf. iii. 
16. 

put to rout, P. R. ii. 218. 
row, P. L. i. 709, 727, iv. 146, 
v. 2 12, vi. 572, 6*04, 650, ix. 
6'27 ; Od. Nat. 87 ; 0</. Sol. 
Mif. 10. 
rowling, Pntf. 2. 
rows, P. L. vii. 439. 
royal, P. X. i. 677, ii. 1, iv. 



211, v. 765, xii. 325; P.P. 
iii. 373 ; Son. xxi. 1 ; P/. 
lxxxv. 54. 
royalties, P. L. ii. 451. 
royal-tower'd, Vac. Ex. 100. 
rubb'd, P. L. i. 774. 
rubied, P. L. v. 6*33 ; Com. 915. 
rubrick, P. P. iv. 393. 
ruby, P. L. iii, 597; S.A. 543. 
ruddy, P. L. ii. 889, ix. 578; 

Pf. exxxvi. 45. 
rude, P. L. ix. 391, 544, x. 
1074 ; Lye. 4; IlPenf. 136 ; 
Cow. 352 ; Son. i. 9, xvi. 2 ; 
Orf. JVflf.,31. 
too rude, S. A. 156*7. 
rudenefs, Com. 179« 
rudeft, P/ lxxx. 52. 
rudiments, P. P. i. 157, iii- 245. 
rue, (fubft.) P. L. xi. 414. 
rue, P. L. i. 134, ix. 1180 ; 

P. P. iv. 181. 
rueful, P. L. ii. 580, 780; S. A. 

1553. 
rues, P. L. iv. 72 ; P. R. ir„ 

6*24. 
ruffled, 5. A. 1138 ; Cow. 380, 
rugged, Lye. 93 ; IlPenf. 58 ; 

Cow. 354 ; Son. xi, 10. 
rugged'ft, P. P. ii, 164. 
ruin, P. L. i. 46, 91, ii. 305, 
509, 995> 1009, iv. 522, v. 
56*7, vi. 193, 456, 519, 670, 
797, 874, ix. 275, 493; P.P. 
i. 415, in. 79, iv. 413; S.A. 
1043, 126*7,1514,1515,1684; 
Son. viii. 14; Pf. i. 16. 
ruin, (verb) P. L. iii. 258, v. 

228 ; P. R. i. 102. 
ruin'd, P. L. i. 593, ix. 906 7 

950 ; Od. D. F. J. 43. 
ruining, P. X. vi. 86*8. 
ruinous, P.L. ii. 921, vi.21t); 

P. R. iv. 436\ 
ruins, P. P. iv. 363. 
rule, P.L. iv. 301, 429, v. 297, 
vii. 347, viii. 375, x. 582, xi, 
031, xii, 24,581; Com. 21. j 



VERBAL INDEX. 



rale, (verb) P. X. i. 735, ii. 

327, vii. 350, 351, 520, 628, 

ix. 1184, x. 196, 493, xi. 

339, xii. 226; P.P.ii. 469; 

5. A. 56. 
rul'd, P. X. i. 5l6, iii. 711, vi. 

848, ix. 1127, x. 493, 516; 

P. R. i. 49, iii. 159 ; Pf- 

cxxxvi. 66. 
rules, P. X. xi. 523 ; P. P. iv. 

283, 358 ; Com. 759. 
rules, (verb) P. X. ii. 351, 907, 

vi. 177 ; P.P. i. 236; ii. 

466; Com. 876. 
m\%S.A.67l. 
ruminating, P. X. iv. 352. 
rumour, P. X. ii. 963 ; Lye. 80. 
rumour'd, P. X. iv. 817 ; S. A. 

16*00. 
rumours, Sow. xv. 4. 
run, P. X. iii. 607, 651, v. 181, 

vi. 335, vii. 98, 372, viii. 88, 

xii. 505 ; P. R. i. 441 ; S. A. 

597, 1320, 1522, 1541 ; Com. 

147,363, 1013 ; Od.onTime, 

1 ; Ep. M. Win. 23. 
run back, Od. Nat. 135. 
rung, P. X. ii. 655 t 723 y iii. 347, 

vi. 204, vii. 562, 633, ix.737. 
runners, S.A. 1324. 
runneth, Vac. Ex. 95. 
running, P. L. vii. 397 ; S. A, 

1521 ; L'AL 142. 
runs, P. X. iv. 234 ; Od. Nat. 

175. 
rupture, P. X. vii. 419. 
rural, P. X. iv. 134, 247, v. 

211, ix. 4,451, 841, xi. 639; 

P. R. i. 314; Lye. $2; Arc. 

94, 108 ; Cow. 267, 547,952. 
rufh, P. X. ii. 534; S.A. 21; 

Com. 621. 
rum-candle, Com. 338. 
rufiYd, P. X. Ji. 726, vi. 215, 

600, 749, xi. 743; P. JR. iv. 

414; S.A. 1435. 
rufhing, P. X. iv. 407, vi. 97, 

313; Od.Paf.36, 



rumy-fringed, Com. 890. 
rufling, P. X. i. 768, ix. 519 i 

II Pen/. 129. 
ruffet, L'Al. 71. 
Ruffian, P. X. x. 431, xi. 394. 
ruftick, P. X. xi. 433; P. R. ii. 

299 ; Com. 849 J Od. JVaf . 87. 
Ruth, Son. ix. 5. 
ruth, Lye. 163 ; &m. ix. 8. 



S. 

Sabbath, P. X. vii. 634. 
Sabbath-day, 5. A. 149. 
Sabbath-ev'ning, P. X. viii. 

246. 
Sabean, P. X. iv. 162. 
fable, Lye. 22 ; II Pen/. 35 ; 

Com. 221,223. 
fable-floled, Od.Nat. 220. 
fable-vefted, P. X. ii. 962. 
Sabrina, Com. 826, 859. 
facred, P. X. i. 454, ii. 1034, 

iii. 29, 148, 208, 369, iv. 

951, v. 557, 619, vi. 25,379, 

709, 748, vii. 331, ix. 107, 

192, 679> 904, 924, xi. 134, 

xii. 21, 341, 509; P. R. i. 

231, 488; S. A. 363, 428, 

1001; Lye. 15, 102; Arc. 

83; Com. 262, 425, 795; Od. 

Nat 15,217; Od.Hor. 14; 

Pf. lxxxvii. 26. 

more facred, P. X. iv, 706. 
facrifice, P. X. i. 393, iii. 269, 

xii. 232; P. R. i. 457, iii. 

83, 116; S. A. 436, 1612; 

Sen. 2. 
facrifie'd, P. X. xi. 451. 
facrifices, S. A. 1312. 
facrificing, P. X. xi. 438, xii. 

20. 
facrilegious, P. R. iii. 140; 

#. ^. 833. 
fad, P. X. i. 135, ii. 146, 524, 

578, 820, 872, iii. 525, iv. 

28, 357, 716, v, 94, 116, 564^ 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vi. 541, ix. 13, 917, 1002, 
x. 18, 159, 343, 719, 863, 
967, 977, xi. 40, 109, 162, 
272, 478, 755, 868, xii. 603, 
609 ; P. R. i. 43, 109; S. A. 
1551, 1560; Lye. 6, 148; 
II Pen/. 43, 103 ; Com. 189, 
235, 355; Son. viii. 13, x. 
5 ; Od. Paf. 43 ; Od. Cir. 6 ; 
Ep. M. Win. 45 ; Vac. Ex. 
50; P/lxxxvi. 4. 
full fad, P.L. xi.675. 

faddeft, <S. ^. 1560; 77 P«j/I 
57 ; Od. PaJ. 9- 

fadly, Com. 509, 1002. 

fadnefs, P. L. iv. 156, x. 23. 

fafe, P.L. i. 310, ii. 23, 317, 
411, iii. 21, 197, v. 683, ix. 
815, x. 316, 875, xi. 371, 
814, xii. 215, 314; S. A. 
253, 802; Com. 81, 320, 400, 
693; Pf. iv. 40, lxxx. 16, 32, 
80, lxxxiv. 14. 
as fafe as, Com. 389. 
more fafe, P. L. vii. 24. 

fafely, P. P. iv. 555 ; Com. 585. 

fafer, P.L.x. 1029. 

fafeft, P. L. ix. 26'8, xi. 365 ; 
S. A. 135. 

fafety, P. L. ii. 280, 481, vii. 
15; S. A. 681, 780, 799, 
1002,1128, 1132;P/Iiv. 42. 

faffron, L'Al. 126. 

fagacious, P. L. x. 281. 

fage, P. L. ii. 305; P. P. iv. 
272; Lye. 96; II Pen/. 11, 
117; Com. 515, 786; Son. 
xvii. 1 ; Otf. D. P. I. 54. 

fagely, P. P. iv. 285. 

fager, L'Al. 17 

fages, P. L. xn. 362 ; P. P. iv. 
251; Od.Nat.5. 

faid, P. L. i. 243, ii. 417, iii. 
736, iv. 443, 736, 827, 851, 
854, v. 37, 58, 64,224,361, 
718, 872, vi. 719. 746, vii. 
217,230,243,261,282,309, 
313,387 450, 524, 530, viii. 



273, 296, 317, ix. 631, 656* 

662, 664, 917, 1034, x. 157> 

504, 610, 855, xi. 526, 

530, 635, xii. 485; P. R. i- 

229, ii. 244, iii. 150, 183, iv. 

322, 450; Com. 185, 6'32 r 

852; Od. Nat. 117; Pf. 

lxxxii. ll y Ixxxiii. 45. 
faid'ft, P. L. vi. 187, ix. 933, 

1157; P. P. ii. 379. 
fail, P. L. ii. 422, vi. 534, ix. 

515; P. R. iv. 582; Cow?. 

780. 
fail, (verb) P. L. iv. 159. 
fail-broad, P. L. ii. 927- 
failing, P. L. ii. 638, iii. 520; 

S.A.713. 
fails, P. L. iii. 439; S. 4. 718. 
fails, (verb) P. L. v. 268. 
faint, P. L. iii. 484, v. 247, xii. 

200; Son. xxiii. 1; Ep. J\L 

Win.6l,7\. 
fainted, Com. 11. 
faintly, P. L. iv. 122; P. P. 

iii. 93; i/ Pen/. 13; Cow. 

453 ; Od. Nat. 42 ; Orf. SoL 

Muf. 9. 
faints, P. L. iii. 330, 46 1, iv. 

762, vi. 47, 398, 742, 767, 

801, 882, vii. 136, x. 614, xi. 

705 ; P. R. iv. 349 ; S. A. 

1288; Lye. 178; Son. xxiiL 

1; P/! lxxxv. 32, 33. 
faith, P/ ii, 11, viii. 11. 
fake, P. L. iii. 238, ix. 993, x. 

201, 802, xi. 514, xii. 569; 

P. R. iii. 45, 46, 98 ; S. A. 

372, 1629; Lye. 114; P/. 

vi. 8. 
fale, S. A. 1466. 
Salem, P. P. ii. 21 ; Od. Paf. 

39. 
fallow, Cow?. 709. 
Salmanaflar, P. P. iii. 278. 
fait, P.L. xi. 834; Com. 19. 
falvation, P. L. xi. 708, xii. 441 , 

448 ; P. P, i. 167; P/. lxxxv* 

38. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



&lve, P. R. iv. 12; S. A. 184. 
felutation, P. L. v. 386 ; P. P. 

ii. 107. 
falute, P. P. ii. 67; Od. May- 

M.9; Vac. Ex.7, 
Samarcand, P. L. xi. 389. 
Samaritan. P. P. iii. 359. 
fame, P. L. i. 256, iii. 623, iv. 

66, 835, v. 83, 490, vi. 176, 

viii. 345, 581, x. 571, 826, 

xi. 633, 882 ; P. R. u 354 ; 

S. A. 232, 786, l6'58 ; Lye. 

24 ; Com. 738 ; Son, vii. 11 ; 

Vac. Ex. 16; P/. ixxxiii. 67. 
Samosd, P, L. x. 696. 
Samos, P. L. v. 265. 
fampler, Com. 751. 
Samfon, P. L. ix. 1060 ; S. A. 

126, 341, 438, 445, 733, 766, 

909,1016,1076,1129,1293, 

1310,1348, 1391, 1563, 1581, 

1601, 1615, 1635, 1657,1709, 

1710. 
fan&ity, P. L. vii. 507, viii, 

487, x. 639, xi. 837. 
fan&ities, P. L. iii. 60. 
lanaitude, P. L. iv. 293. 
fan&uary, P. L. i. 388, v. 732, 

vi. 672, xii. 249; S. A. 1674; 

Pf. 1 xxx vii. 3. 
fandals, Lye. 187. 
iands, P. L. i. 355, ii. 903, iv. 

238; Com. 117,209- 
fandy, Arc. 97 ; Com. 424. 
fang, P. L. iii. 383, vii. 192; 

Lye. 186. 
fanguine, P. L. vi. 333 ; Lyc.106. 
fap, P. L. ix. 837- 
fapience, P. L. vii. 195, ix. 

797, 1018. 
fapient, P. L. ix. 442. 
faplings, Arc. 46. 
&pphire, P. L. ii. 1050, iv. 237, 

vi. 758, 772 ; Corn. 26. 
fapphire- coloured, Od. Sol.Muf, 

7. 
fapphires, P. L. iv. 605* 



Samaritans, P. R. iv. 78. 
Sarra, P. L. xi. 243. 
fat, P. L. i. 360, 602, 639, 735, 
795, ii. 5, 300, 304, 417, 
420,557,648,724,777,778, 
962, iii. 63, 408, iv. 30, 196, 
197,327,333,351,549,989, 
v. 299, 433, 597, vi. 100, 
446, 747, 763, vii. 587, viii. 
41, 287, ix. 1064, 1121, x. 
343, 428, 448, 559, 594, 864, 
xi. 99> 393; P. P. i. 412, ii. 
118,440, iv. 577; & A. 805, 
1652; Arc. 43; Com. 293, 
453 ; Od. Nat. 59, 87 ; Vac. 
Ex.6; Pf.i.4. 

Satan, P. L. i. 82, 192, 271, 
757, ii. 5, 300, 380, 427, 
630, 674, 707, 736, 968, 988, 
1010, 1041, iii. 70, 422, 540, 
653, 736, iv. 9, 173, 356, 
827,878,885,905,950,968, 
985, 1006, v. 225, 658, 743, 
756, vi. 85, 109, 191, 246, 
324, 327, 414,469, 557, 607, 
900, ix. 53, 75,x. 2, 8, 172, 
184, 189, 236, 258, 315, 327, 
386, 414, 419, 426, 591, 841, 
1034, xii. 391, 394, 430, 
547 ; P. R. i. 143, 497, ii. 
115, 172, 319, 392, iii. 1, 
146, iv. 21, 194, 365, 562, 
581, 634. 

Satanick, P. £. vi. 392 ; P. R. 
i. 161. 

Satan's, P. L. xi. 248, xii. 492. 

fate, Com. 714. 

fated, P. L. ix. 598. 

fatiate, P. L. i. 179, vii, 282, 
viii. 214, ix. 248, 792. 

fatiety, P. L. viii. 216. 

fatisfa&ion, P. L. iii. 212, xii. 
419. 

fatisfied, P. L. ii. 2 12, viii. 180, 
x. 79, 804, xii. 535; S. A. 
484 ; Od. Cir. 22. 

fatisfy, P. L. iii. 295, viii. 584, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

x. 803, 991 ; P. R. ii. 229, 785, 867, vii. 249, 309, 337, 

254 ; S. A. 837. 352, 395, viii. 43, 26l, 273, 

fat'ft, P. L. i. 21, iv. 825; 277,305, 462, 463, 482. ix. 

P. P. iv. 425. 592, 646, 1030, x. 184, 334, 

Saturn, P. L. i. 512, 519, x. 336,337,448,538,540,715, 

583 ; 27 Pen/. 24. xi. 70, 151, 214, 406, 556, 

Saturn's, II Pen/. 25; Com. 805. 638, 712, 726, 840, 887; 

Satyr, P. R. ii. 191- P- P. i. 79, 319, 330, ii. 60, 

Satyrs, Lye. 34. 26'7, 2/0, 288, 289, iii. 310, 

favage, P. L. iv. 172, vii. 36, 322; S. A. 793, 1071 ; Com. 

ix. 1085; P.P. iii. 23; CW. 182, 291, 294; Od. Nat. 83; 

358, 426. J/, cxiv. 7. 

favc, (adverb) P. X. i. 182, ii. faws, Com. 110. 

814, iii. 427, v. 39, 324, 380, faw'lt, P. L. ii. 796, viii. 446, 

655, vi. 691, viii. 409, ix. xi. 471,607, 614,684,707, 

478, xii. 258, 291 ; -ft Pen/. 787, xii. 342. 

82 ; Ep. M. Win. 7. %, P. L. i. 27, 28, 376, ii. 160, 

fave, (verb) P. L. iii. 215, 279, i". 213, iv. 93, 900, 947, v. 

307, iv. 855, vi. 538, viii. 512, vii. 40, 640, viii. 228, 

82, 133, xi. 820, xii. 410; 505, 549, ix. 562, 566, 617+ 

P. R. i. 344, iv. 635 ; S. A, 638, 948, x. 158, 575, 668, 

24,7, 894; Arc. 48; Com. 396, 671, 755, 808, xi. 879, xii. 

&66, 889 ; Son. viii. 14, xvi. 384, 479 ; P. P. i. 450, 474, 

13, xxiii. 6; P/I iii. 19, vii. 2, iii. 2, 8,357; S. A. 204, 215, 

lxxx. 12, lxxxvi. 7, 60, 337, 799, 1013, 1310, 1392, 

Ixxxviii. 1. 1456, 1729; Com. 432, 783 ; 

fav'd, P. L. iii. 173; Ep. M. Od. Nat. 15 ; Soph. 1 ; P/. ii. 

Win. 36. 6, iii. 5, iv. 25. 

faves, P. X. ii. 158, xii. 319, faying, P. X. ii. 466, 871, iv a 

P/. vii. 42, Ixxxviii. 29. 536, 797, v. 82, 331, vi. 189, 

faving, P. P. ii. 474 ;iy. lxxx v. vii. 395, viii. 300, 644, ix. 

13, 27. 179, 385, 780, 834, 900, x. 

Saviour, P. L. iii. 412, x. 209, 85, 200, 272, 410; P. R. iv 

xii. 393, 544 ; P. P. i. 187, 394, 541. 

406, 465, 493, ii. 283, 338, fayings, P. R. ii. 104; S. A. 652, 

iii. 43, 121, 181, 266, 346, fay'ft, P. L. v. 818, 853, viii. 

386, iv. 25, 170, 285, 367, 612; P. R. iii. 394, iv. 127; 

401, 442, 506, 615, 636. S. A. 822, 1580; Ep. Hob/ 

favour, P. L. ix. 1019, x. 269, II. 25. 

xi. 26 ; P. R. ii. 342. fcaffolds, S. A. 1610. 

favours, P. L. x. 1043. icalding, P. L. x. 556. 

favoury, P. L. iv. 335, v. 84, fcale, P. L. iv. 354, 1014, v. 

304, ix. 579, 741 ; L'Al. 84. 433, 509, vi. 245, viii. 591> 

faw, P. L. i. 455, ii. 744, 993, xi. 656; P. R. ii. 173. 

iih 510, 590, 622, 623, 708, fcale, (verb) P. L. ii. 71. 

iv. 1, 127, 179, 286, 847, fcal'd, P. L. iii. 541. 

848, v. 456, 491, 714, 715, fcales, P. L. iv. 997, vii. 401, 

856, vi. 250, 510, 648, 651, x. 676. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



fcaly, P. L. i. 206, ii. 651, vii. 

474 ;0d. Nat. 172. 
fcan, Son. xiii. 3. 
fcandal, P. L. i. 416 ; S. iif . 453. 
fcandalous, S. A. 1409. 
fcannM, P. L. viii. 74. 
fcant, P. L. iv. 628 ; S. A. 

1027; Cow. 308. 
'fcape, P. £. i. 482, 749, "• 

442, iv. 911, x. 5, 1039; 

P. P. i. 477 ; S. A. 697 ; 

Com. 814;P/.lxxxiii. 64. 
'fcap'd, P. L. i. 239, iv. 7, 8,906, 

v. 225, xii. 117; 5. A. 1659- 
fcapes, P. P. ii. 189. 
fear, P. £. ii. 401. 
fcarce, P. P. ii. 72, 96, ill- 51, 

59, 85, 223, 424, iv. 86; 

S.A.6,79, 1546; Ij/c. 119; 

Ep. M. Win. 20 ; P/. viii. 15. 
fcare, P. L. i. 283, 699, ii. 284, 

541, iii. 433, iv. 357, 874, v. 

139, 558, 559, vi. 393, 568, 

vii. 67, 313, 319, 470, viii. 

155, 306, ix. 664, 850, x. 

654, 923, xi. 499, 650, 762. 
fcarf, Com. 995. 
fears, P. L. i. 601. 
fcath'd, P.L. i. 613. 
fcatter'd, P. L. i. 304, 325, xi. 

294, 653 ; Son. xviii. 2. 
fcatters, L'^/. 50. 
fcene, P. L. iv. 140, xi. 637 ; 

P. R. ii. 239, iv. 142. 
fcenes, Od. Paff. 22. 
fcent, P. L. ix. 587, x. 267, 

277 ; S. A. 390, 720. 
fcented, P. L. x. 279- 
fcents, P. L. ix. 200. 
fcepter, P. L. ii. 327, 1002, iii. 

339, 340, iv. 90, v. 8 16, 8S6, 

vi. 730, 746, xii. 357; P.P. 

ii. 486, iii. 405, iv. 480; 
S. A % 1303 ; Com. 36, 828 ; 

py: ii. 20. 

fcepter'd, P. L. i. 734, ii. 43, 

xi. 660;// Pen/. 98. 
fcience, P. I, i Xs 680. 



fchool, P. P. iii. 238 5 5. ^ 

297. 
fchools, P. jR. iv. 251, 277; 

Com. 439. 
fciential, P. L. ix. 837. 
Scipio, P. L. ix. 510; P. P. iii, 

34. 
feoff, Pf. ii. 9. 
fcoffing, P. L. vi. 568, 629- 
fcoop, P. X. iv. 336. 
fcope, P. X. ii. 127; P.R.U 

494. 
fcorch, Com. 929. 
fcorch'd, P. L. vi. 372. 
fcorching, P. L. x. 691. 
fcore, S. A. 433 ; Od. Pajf. 4& 
fcorn, P. L. i. 178, 619, ii. 697, 
iv. 827, 834, 902, v. 904, 
906, vi. 632, ix. 299, 951, x, 
509, xi. 811, xii. 341; P.R. 
i. 415, iv. 550; S. A. 34, 
137, 442, 494,646; Pf.W. 
8, lxxxvii. 14. 
fcorn, (verb) P. L. iii. 199, ir. 
966 f ix. 1011; Od. D. F. I. 
63. 
fcorn'd, P. L. vi, 40, x. 54; 

418; S. A. 943. 
fcorners, Pf. i. 4. 
fcornful, P. L. iv. 536 y vi. 149, 

x. 625 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 22. 
fcorning, P. L. ii. 134; Com. 

685. 
fcorns, P. P. iii. 191, iv. 387. 
fcorpion, P. L. iv. 998, x. 328, 

524. 
fcorpions, P. L. ii. 701. 
fcorpion's, S. A. 360. 
Scots, Son. xvi. 7. 
fcour, P. L. vi. 529. 
fcourge, P. i. ii. 90. 
fcourge, (verb) P. L. iv. 914, 
fcourg'd, P. L. x. 311. 
fcours, P. L. ii. 633. 
fcout, P. L. ii. 133, iii. 543 ; 

Com. 138. 
fcouts, P. L. vi. 529. 
fcowls, P. Lt ii. 49K 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fcramble, Lye. 117. 

fcrannel, Lye. 124. 

fcreen'd, P. R. iv. 30. 

fcribbled, P. L. viii. 83. 

Scribes, P. R. i. 26l. 

fcrip, Com. 626. 

fcroll, P. L. xii. 336; Pf, 
lxxxvii. 21. 

fcruple, P.R. ii. 331. 

fcrupled, P. L. ix. 997* 

fcrupulous, Com. 108. ; 

fcrutiny, P. H. iv. 515. 

fculls, P. L. vii. 402. 

fculptures, P. L. i. 71 6. 

fcum, Cow. 595. 

fcumm'd, P. L. i. 704. 

fcurf, P. L. i. 672. 

Scylla, P. L. ii. 660; Cow. 
257. 

Scythian, P. P. iii. 301 ; Vac. 
Ex. 99. 

Scythians, P. R. iv. 78. 

fdein'd, P. X. iv. 50. 

fea, P. L. f. 208, 300, 451, ii. 
287,546,636, 660,912,939, 
1011, iii. 363, 440, 472, 518, 
604, 653, iv. 161, 432, v. 
416, 417, vii. 212, 416, 
473, 521, 533, 619, 629, 
▼iii. 341, ix. 76, 117, x. 286, 
290, 309, 666, 693, 718, xi. 
337, 749, 750, 854, 893, xii. 
141,142,159,195,212,579; 
P. R. ii. 344, iii. 258, iv. 28, 
72; S. A. 710, 962; Lye, 
89 ; Com. 373, 732; Od. Nat, 
52; Od.Hor. 16; Pf, vi. 12, 
lxxxiii. 28, cxiv. 7. 

fea-beaft, P. L. i. 200. 

fea-faring, P. L. ii. 288. 

fea-girt, Com. 21. 

fea-idol, S. A. 13. 

feamen, P. L. i. 205. 

fea-mews, P. L. xi. 835. 

fea-monftcr, P. L. i. 462. 

fea-monftcrs, P. L. xi. 751. 

fta-nymphs, // Pen/. 21. 



fea-paths, Pf. viii. 22. 

fea-weed, P. L. vii. 404. 

feal, P. L. vii. 409, ix. 1043 5 
& ^. 49- 

feal, (verb) P. L. iv. 966. 

feal up, P. L. x. 637. 

feals, P. L* xi. 835 ; Orf. Cir, 
25. 

Cearch, P. L. ii. 403, iv. 528, 
799, ix, 83, x.. 440; ^4rc. 7. 

fearch, (verb) P. L. ii. 830, iv. 
789, vi. 445, vii. }25 r viii. 66*. 

fearch'd, P. L. ix. 76, xii. 377. 

fearching, P. R, i. 260. 

feas, P. L. iii. 559, vii. 308, 
39^, 399, 428, x. 642, 700; 
S. A. 96I ; Lye. 154 ; ^rc. 
31; Com. 115, 713; Son. viii. 
2 ; Od, Cir. 9 ; Ep. Hobf. II. 
31; Od. //or. 6. 

feaibn, P. L. x. 609; P. Px. ii. 
72, iv. 146,380, 468; Lye. 
7 ; Z/^/. 89 ; Son. xx. 5 ; 
Od. Nat. 35; Pf.i.S. 

feafon, (verb) P.L.x. 609. 

feafoivM, P. L. v. 850, ix. 200, 
xii. 597. 

feafons, P. L. iii. 41, iv. 640, 
v. 323, vii. 342, 427, 623, 
Tiii. 69, x. 678, 1063; P. K. 
iii. 187- 

feat, P. L. i. 5, 181, 243, 383, 
467, 634, ii. 76. 347, 3g4, 
674, 931, 1050, iii. 527, 
632,669,724, iv. 247, 371 , 
756 y vi. 27, 197, 226, 273, 
vii. 141, 329, 623, viii. 42, 
299, 557 t 590, ix. 100, 153, 
782, x. 85, 237, 424, 6l4, 
xi. 148, 343, 386, 388, 407, 
408, 418, 575, xii. 457, 642 ; 
P. R. ii. 442, iii. 277, 278, 
373, iv. 612 ; Lye. l6; Com, 
916; Od. Nat. 103, 196; Od. 
D F. L 59 ; Brut. 4 ; Pf. i. 
3, lxxx. 58, lxxxvi. 35. 

feat, (v«rb) P. L. i. 79,0. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Seated, P. L. vi. 644; P. R. iv. 

30 ; Pf. lxxxvii. 3. 
feats, P. L. i. 383, 796, v. 392, 

xi. 82; P. R. ii. 125, iii. 

262; S. A. l60J;Co7R. 11. 
fecond, P. L. i. 702, ii. 17, 

713, iii. 288, 409, 712, 

iv. 3, v. 387, vi. 605, 684, 

viii. 407, ix. 609, 1001, 

x. 591, xi. 64, 859, xii. 7, 

13, 35, 162, 321; P. P. ii. 

275 ; S. A. 1391 ; Ep. *f. 

tf'Mi. 25. 
fecond, (verb) P. L. ii. 419, ix. 

101. 
Secondary, P. L. v. 854. 
feconded, P. L. iv. 929, v. 850, 

x. 335; S.J. 1153. 
fecrecy, P. L. viii. 427 ; S. A. 

1002; C<w». 387- 
fecret, P. X. i. 6, 795, ii. 663, 

766, 838, iii. 671, iv. 7, v. 

672, vi. 522, ix. 810, 811, 

x. 32, 248, 358 ; P. P. iv. 

254; 5. A. 201, 384, 394, 

497, 610, 665, 1007, 1199; 

//Pew/. 28; Arc. 30; Co/«. 

129; Od.Nat. 28; 0<f. Dr. 

19 ; Vac. Ex. 45. 
fecreteft, P. L. x, 249. 

in fecret, P. R. i. 15. 
fecrets, P. L. ii. 89 1, 972, v. 

569, vii. 95, viii. 74, x. 478, 

xii. 578; 5. A. 492, 776, 

798, 879- 
feci, P. L. vi. 147 ; P. P- iv. 

279. 
fecular, P. JC. xii. 517 ; S. A. 

1707; Son.xvi. 12. 
fecure, P. L. i. 26 1, 638, ii. 

359, 399, iv. 186, 791, v. 

238, 638, 736, vi. 541, 

672, ix. 339, 1175, x.779, 

xi. 196, 746, 802, xii. 620; 

P. R. i. 176, iii. 360, iv. 

616; S. A. 55; UAL 91 ; 

Com. 327 ', 409. 
fecure, (verb) P. L. ix, 347 t 



348; P. JR. iii. 348; Cotth 

6l8;P/.vii. 2. 
fecur'd, P. L. v. 222. 
fecurely, P. L. vi. 130. 
fecurer, P. L. ix. 371. 

fed, Z3/C. 129 ; L'AL 103 ; Ep. 
Hobf. I. 17. 

fedentary, P. X. viii. 32 ; 5. J. 

571. 
fedge, P. L. i. 304 ; Xj/c. 104. 
fedgy, Vac. Ex. 97- 
feditious, P. L. vi. 152. 
feduce, P. X. ii. 368, vi. 901, 

ix. 307; P. P. i. 178. 
feduc'd, P. X. i. 33, 219, iv. 

83, ix. 287, x. 41, 332, 485, 

577* 
fedulous, P. L. ix. 27. 

fee, P. X. i. 134, 169, 216, ii. 
66 , iii. 54, 262, 337, 489, 
662, iv. 489, 579, v. 29, 80, 
411, 739,878, vi. 166,199, 
540, 559, 792, vii. 145, viii. 
227, 233, 364, 399, 448, 494, 
ix. 119,720,812, 1017,1090, 
x. 536, 616, 902, 962, xi. 
22, 173, 415,459,632,783, 
xii. 8,51,60, 128, 135, 158, 
276, 289, 422, 590 ; P. P. i, 
94, 151, 246, 338, 384, ii. 
57, 398, iii. 7, 245, 303, 308, 
iv. 155, 244, 571 ; S. A. 75, 
118, 192, 326, 1088, 1129, 
1154, 1415, 1451, 1520, 
1539, 1588; 11 Pen/. 121; 
Com. 216, 373, 620, 668; 
$o?i. xii. 13; Od. Nat. 22, 
237 ; Vac. Ex. 35 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 
6, Ixxxv. 25, lxxxvi. 62. 

fee, fee, Od. Paf. 36. 

feed, P. L. i. 8, vii. 310, 312, 
x. 180, 181, 499, 965, 999, 
1031, xi. 26, ll6, 155, 873, 
xii. 125, 148, 233, 260, 273, 
327, 379, 395, 450, 543, 600, 
601, 623; P.P. i. 54, 64; 
S. A. 1439; P/ Ixxx. 4, 
cxiv, 1. 



VERBAL TNDEX. 



feed-time, P. L. xi. 899- 

feeing, P. L. viii 507, ix. 369, 
x. 613; S. A. 243; Son. 
xxii. 3. 

feek, P. X. i. 163, 382, 480, ii. 
252, 464, 975, iii. 233, 476, 
iv. 184, 272,375, 487,735, 
774, v. 518, vi. 376, 559, 
viii. 187, 197, 390, ix. 124, 
127, 364, 383, 1140, 1141, 
1152, x. 1001, 1028, 1067, 
xi. 328, 770, xii. 515; P. P. 
j. 336, iii. 44, 134, 347, iv. 
143, 314, 325, 426; S. A. 
320, 406, 522, 1329; II Pen/. 
108 ; Com* 302, 365, 699 ; 
Pf. iv. 11, lxxxvi. 51. 

feeking, P. L. iii. 453, x. 943, 
xi. 532; P. R. iii. 151, 242; 
S.A. 237,252, 828, 1190; 
Pf. vii. 26. 

feeks, P. L. vi. 384, vii. 6l3, ix. 
255, 274, xii. 165; P.P. iii. 
110, iv. 318; S. A. 837; 
Com. 376. 

feek'ft, P. L. vi. 724, vii. 639, 
viii. 428. 

feem, P. L. ii. 122, 747, iv. 
957, v. 4:66, 624, vi. 12, viii. 
19, 117,129,210, 404, 5S0, 
ix. 632, 706, 1093, x. 624, 
xi. 146, 297, 577 ; P. R- iii. 
261, iv. 355, 441, 463; S.A. 
249, 332, 722, 729, 1420, 
1504. 

feem'd, P. L. i. 777, ii. HO, 
167, 301, 508, 642, 650, 669, 
670, 672, 845, iii. 74, 423, 
538, 56*6, 567, 595, 629, iv. 
152,290,291,296,459, 565 y 
850, 990, v. 52, 617, vi. 91, 
146,230,232,244,301,499, 
573, 615, 667, vii. 83, 329, 
▼iii. 39, 306, 376, 472, ix. 
394, 453, 787, 919, 1179, 
x. 142, 531, 1095, xi. 10, 
479, 614 ; L\ R. i. 315, ii, 



295, 357; S. A. 16985 
Arc. 9- 

feeming, P. L. iv. 3l6, ix. 738, 
x. 11, xi. 604; S. A. 1035, 
1464. 

feemingly, P. L. v. 434. 

feemlier, P. R. ii. 299. 

feemlieft, P. L. ix. 268. 

feems, P. L. ii. 71, 590, 790, 
iii. 84, 423, 484, 689, 698, 
iv. 78, 513, 871, 883, v. 69, 
271, 310, vi. 428, vii. 415, 
viii. 547, 550, ix. 105, 769, 
987, 1170, x. 600,755, 1013, 
xi. 599, 602, 850; P. R. i. 
91, ii. 93, 229, 450 ; S. A. 
595, 661, 711, 1443, 1545, 
1749 ; Od. Nat. 195. 

feem'ft, P. L. ix. 371 ; P. R. i. 
327,348, iv. 212; Od. Hor. 
13. 

feen, P. L. i. 344, 544, iii. 138, 
549, 552, 599, iv. 793, 997, 
v. 56, 157, vi. 770, 774, vii. 
369, 370, 579, viii, 578, ix. 
436, 508, 546, S26, 1094, x. 
58, 104, 877, xi. 462, 466, 
561,745,789, xii. 6; P.P. 
1. 249, ii. 2, 182, iii. 236; 
S. A. 1440; Lye. 43; II Pen/1 
86; Arc. 95, 109; Com. 471, 
575; Son. ix. 3; Od. Nat. 
114,213,229; P/. lxxx. 11. 

feer, P. L. xii. 553. 

feers, P. P. iii. 15. 

fees, P. L. i. 783, 784, ii. 191, 
v. 258, viii. 578, ix. 46'9, 
54,6; L'Al. 77; Com. 665. 

feeft, P. L. i. £!, 180, ii. 781, 
iii. 80, 719, iv- 46'7, 468, v. 
679, vi. 142, 147, 263, vii* 
580, viii. 128, 145, 206, 
317; P. P. ii. 318, 393, in„ 
285, iv. 44, 47; S. A. 826, 
1105, 1554. 

Seir, P. L. xii. 146. 

feife, P. L. i. 317, iiV 703, iv* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



407,796, xi. 221, xii. 356; 

Com. 653 ; Son. viii. 2 ; Od. 

Patf. 10 ; Od. Cir. 14 ; Ep. 

M. Win. 50; Fore, of' Con. 3; 

Pf. lxxxiii. 46. 
feis'd, P. X. i. 511, ii. 432, 758, 

iii. 271, 552, 553, iv. 489, vk 

198, 647, vii. 143, viii. 288, 

ix. 1037, xi. 669, xii. 412. 
feifure, P. X. xi. 254. 
fcldom, P. X. ix. 423, x. 901 ; 

P. R. i. 345, 436, iv. 507 ; 

Son. xi. 4. 
feleft, P. X. xi. 646, 823, xii. 

Ill; 5.^. 363. 
feleaeft, P. £. viii. 513. 
Seleucia, P. X. iv. 212 ; P. Jl. 

iii. 291. 
felf, L'^/. 145 ; Com. 373 ; Oc?. 

on Time, 10. 
felf-balanc'd, P. X. vii. 242. 
felf-begot, P. X. v. 860. 
felf-begotten, 6'. A. 1699. 
felf-condemning, P. L. ix. 11 88. 
felf-confum'd, Com. 597. 
felf-deceiv'd, P. R. iv. 7. 
felf-delufion, Com. 365. 
felf-deprav'd, P. X. iii. 130. 
ielf-deltruftion, P. X. x. 106l. 
felf-difpleas'd, 5'. ^.514. 
felf-efteem, P. X. viii. 572. 
felf-fed, Com. 597. 
felt-kill'd, S. A. 1664. 
frlf-knowing, P. X. vii. 510. 
felf-left, P. X. xi. 93. 
felf-loft, P. X. vii. 154. 
feli-love, S. A. 1031. 
felf -offence, S. A. 515. 
felf-open'd, P. X. v. 254. 
felf-prefervation, S. A. 505. 
felt-rais'd, P. X. i. 634, v. 860. 
felt-rigorous, S. A. 513. 
fclt-roll'd, P. L. ix. 183. 
felf-iame, P. L. x. 315, xi. 203 ; 

Lye. 23. 
feU-fatisfying, 5. A. 306. 
f'elf-fevere, 5. //. 827. 
felt-tempted, P. L. iii. 130. 



felf-violence, S. A, 1584. 

fell, S. A. 940. 

femblance, P. X. i. 529, ix, 

607 ; Son. vii. 5. 
Semele, P. P. ii. 187. 
fenate, P. X. xii. 225; Hor. 

1.2. 
fenate-houfe, CVwi. 389. 
fenator, Son. xvii. 2. 
fend, P. X. ii. 402, 415, iii. 

324, v. 548, vi- 425, 459, vii. 

166, 572, ix. 410, x. 55, 

403, xi. 97 y 26l, xii. 486; 

P. R. i. 158, ii. 43; S. A. 

1431 ; Com. 219. 
fend forth, P. X. iv. 383, vi. 

486, xi. 117. 
fend up, P. X. ix. 195. 
fender, P. X. iv. 852. 
fending, P. X. x. 59; S. A. 

1394. 
fends, P. X. viii. 238, x. 1077, 

xii. 498 ; P. Jl. i. 462 ; Son. 

xxi. 14. 
fenemals, P. X. ix. 38. 
Sennaer, P. X. iii. 467. 
fenfe, P. X. i. 98, ii. 151, 556 t 

iii. 137, iv. 206, 379, v. 411, 

485, 565, 5/2, vi. 351, 394, 

viii. 119,289,456,579,609, 

ix. 96, 113, 188, 315, 554, 

580, 871,987, 1031, x. 754, 

810, xi. 469, xii. 10; P.P. 

i. 382, 435, iv. 296, 517; 

S. A. 176, 6l6, 632, 1042, 

1556, 16S5; // Pen/. 14; 

Arc. 62; Com. 260, 53S, 

839 ; 0d. Sol. Mnf. 4. 
fenfelefs, Son. xii. 9. 
fenfes, P. X. iii. 188, v. 104, 

xi. 265,540; S. A. 916; 0d. 

Nat. 127- 
fenfible, P. X. ii. 278. 
fenfibly, 5. A. 913. 
fenfual, P. X. ix. 1129; Com, 

77, 975. 
fenfuality, Com. 474. 
fcnfualleft, P. P. ii. 15.1. 



vol. I. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fent, P. L. i. 585, 750, iv. 170, 

842, 852, vi. 621, 836', vii. 

72, viii. 141, 647, ix. 587, i. 

209, 267, 277, 429, 557, 

1091, 1103, xi. 356, xii. 

170, 270, 612; P.P. i. 71, 

460, iii. 107, iv. 491,632; 

S.A.999, 1214, 1675; Lye. 

62; Itrenf. 153; Co;/?, 972 ; 

Od. Nat. 186; Od.D.F. I. 

74; £p. M. fl«. 59; P/. 

lxxx. 46, lxxxviii. 60. 
fent forth, P. L. xi. 857. 
fent up, P. L. xi. 742. 
fentence, P. L. ii. 51, 208, 2.9 1 r 

iii. 145, 332, ix. 88, x. 48, 

192, 776, 805, 934, 1031, 

xi. 109, 253; S. A. IS69. 
fentence, (verb) P. L. x.97* 
fententious, P. 11. iv. 264. 
fenteries, P. L. ii. 412. 
Seon, Pf. exxxvi. 6*5. 
Seori's, P. L. i. 409. 
ieparate, P. L. vi. 743, ix. 422 y 

424,970, x. 251; S. A. 31. 
Septentrion, P. P. iv. 31. 
fepulcher'd, Ep. W. Sh. 15. 
fepulchral, Od. Pqfi 43. 
fepulchre, 6'. ^. 102. 
fepulchrcs, Co;;/. 471. 
(equel, P. L. iv. 1003, x. 334. 
fequent, P. L. xii. l6'5. 
fequefter'd, P. L. iv. 7X)6; Com. 

500. 
feraph, P. J,, i. 324, iii. 667, 

v. 277, 875, 896, vi. 579, vii. 

113, 108. 
fcraphick, P. L. i. 539, 794. 
feraphim, P. L.\. 129, ii- 512, 

750, iii. 381, v. 749, 804, vi. 

249, 604, 841 ; Od. Nat. 113; 

Od. Sol. Muf. 10. 
Serapis, P. P. i. 720. 
JSerbonian, P. L. ii. 592. 
fere, P. L. x. 1071; P/ ii. 27. 

never-l'ere, Lye. 2. 
ferenate, P, L. iV. 769. 
fcrene, P. L. iii. 25, v. 123, 



734, vii. 509, viii. 181, %, 
1094, xi. 45 ; Com. 4. 

Sericana, P. /,. iii. 43S. 

ferious, P. P. i. 203; Co/;/. 787* 

fcrpent, P. L. i. 34, ii. 652, iv. 
347, vii, 495, ix. 86, l6l, 
182,413,455,495,560,615, 
647, 764, 785, 867, 930, 
1150, x. 3, 84, 162, 165, 
174, 495, 514, 580, 867, 879, 
927, 1034, xii. 234, 383, 
454;P,P. i. 312, ii. 1*47, ifc 
5, iv. 618; S.A.997. 

fcrpent-crrour, P. L. vii. 302. 

ferpent-kind, P. L. vii. 482, ix. 
504. 

ferpent-tongue. P. L. ix. 529. 

ferpent-wings, Son. xv. 8. 

ferpentine, P. L. x. 870. 

ferpent's, P. L. x. 1032, xir- 
150. 

ferpents, P. L. x. 520, 539- 

ferried, P. J>. i. 548, vi. 599- 

fervant, P. L. vi. 29, x. 214; 
P.P. iii. 67; 5. A. 1615 ; 
P/.' lxxxvi. 7, 59, exxxvi. 74. 

fervant-of-fervants, P. L. xii. 
104.. 

fervant's, Pf. lxxxvi.ll. 

fervants, P. L. x. 21-5; S. A*- 
1755 ; Cow. 10. 

ferve, P. X. i. 263, ii. 999, iii- 
680, iv. 943, v. 101, 322, 
532, 538, 590, 681, 802, vi. 
166, 175, 179,180,183,440, 
vii. 1 15, viii. 87, 168, ix. 85, 
IO92, x. 727, 767, xi. 517, 
881; P.R. i. 316, iii. 375, 
431,432, iv. 177; S..A. 267 r 
564, 577, 1216; Arc. 105; 
Com. 725, 750; Son. i. 14, 
xix. 5, 11, 14; Pf. ii. 24,. 
lxxxi. 54. 

fervM, P. L. i.64, 217, iii. 110, 
iv. 398, vi. 599, viii. 34, ixi< 
38, 547, xi.60, 518; P. R. 
iii. 379; S. ^ 419, 743; 
/>,M. /{^ 66\ 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tferv'd up, Vac. Ex. 14. 

ferves, P. L. ii. 385, vii. 614 ; 
P. it. ii. 472; 6*. ^.240. 

fervice, P. L. i. 149, iv. 45 
420, v. 529, ix. 155; P. it. 
i. 427, ii. 326; S. ^. 686, 
U99; II Pen/. 163; Arc. 38 i 
Com. 85; Od. Nat. 194; Vac. 
Ex. 30. 

ferviceable, P. it. i. 421 ; Od. 
Nat. 244. 

fervile, P. X. ii. 246, 257, xii. 
305 ; P. it. iv. 102 ; S. A. 5, 
412,413, 574, 1213. 

fervilely, P. L. iv. 959. 

fervility, P. L. vi. 169. 

ferving, P. it. iii. 378. 

fervitude, P L. vi. 175, 178, ix. 
141, xii. 89, 132,220; P.P. 
iii. 381; S. A. 269, 416, 
1336. 

ferv'ft, S. A. 1363. 

feffion, P. i. ii. 514; Od. Nat. 
163- 

Setia, P. it i v. 117. 

fet, P.L. i. 39, 72, 714, iii. 221, 
538,587, iv. 51, 6l2, 664, v. 
63, 509, 632, vi. 89, 522, 755 y 
vii. 349, 376, 385, 583, viii. 
67, 227, 324, 382, x. 149, 
499, 664, xi. 288, 382, 813, 
896; P.R. i. 202, ii. 112, 
153, 207, 320, 410, iii. 284, 
390, iv. 160, 378, 393, 549, 
586, 587, 610; S. A. 255, 
317, 496, 1375, 1466, 1624, 
1679; L'AU 106, 149; U 
Penf. 20; Com. 715; Son. xii. 
10, xiii. 12; Od. Nat. 21; 
Od.PaJ.9;Od.D.F.L62; 
Fore, of Con. 6; Pf. iv. 5, v. 
24, viil. 3, 10, lxxx. 62, lxxxi. 
22, lxxxv. 44, lxxxvi. 47, 52, 
lxxxviii. 26. 

fet forth, P. L vi. 310, vii. 427. 

fet free, P. L. ii. 822. 

fet off, Lye. 80; Com. 801. 

fet on, S. A. 1462. 



fet open, P. L. Xi. 825, 

fet over, P. L. ix. 941. 

fet out, P.L. viii. 111. 

fet up, P. L. xii. 247. 

fets, P. L. ii. 804, v. 357, viil. 

632, xii. 52; P. R. iii. 380 ; 

S. A. 1572. 
fets off, P. L. v. 43. 
fetting, P. L. i. 744, iv. 540. 
fettle, P. L. i v. 940 ; Son. xvii. 5. 
fettled, P. L. ii. 279, vi. 540 ; 

Com. 595. 
fettlings, Com. 810, 
feven, P. L. iii. 481, 648, 654, 

ix. 63, x. 673, xii. 158, 255 ; 

P. R. iv. 35 ; S. A. 1017. 
feven-fold, P.L. ii. 171,iv.9l4 f 
feven-times, P. L. v. 223. 
feven-times-folded, S. A. 1122, 
fevens, P. L. xi. 735. 
feventh, P. L. vii. 581, viii. 

128, xi. 700. 
feventy, P. L. xii. 345. 
fever, P. L. ix. 366; Son.xivA, 
feveral, P. L. ii. 523, 901, iii. 

714, v. 477, 697, vii. 240, 

viii. 131 r x. 323, 610, 650; 

P.R. iii. 276; Com. 25; Od. 

Nat. 234. 
fever'd, P. L. ix. 252, 958 ; 

Com. 274 ; P/. lxxxviii. 70. 
fevere, P. L. ii. 276, 333, iii. 

224, iv. 293, 294, 845, v. 807, 

ix. 1144, 1169, x. 1095; 

P, it. iv. 280 ; Pf. ii. 9, vii. 

43. 

too fevere, P. L. vi. 825. 
feverely, S. A. 788. 
fevereft, P. R. ii. l64. 
fevering, P.L. i. 704. 
feverity, Com. 109* 
Severn, Com. 825 ; Vac. Ex. 9$i 
fevers, Son. xvii. 11. 
fewers, P. L. ix. 38, 446. 
fex, P. L. i. 424, iv. 296, viii, 

471, ix. 574, 822, x. S9S, 

956; S.A.7U, 774,1026. 
fexe$, P.L. viii, 151. 



q2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

textile, P. L. x. 659. ftaggd, Com. 429. 

Jhackles, S.A. 1326. &aggy; P. L. iv. 224, vi. 645 ; 

ihade, P. I*, iii. 557, 6l5, iv. Lye. 54. 

138, 141, '245, 325,451, 532, fhak'd, Od. D. F. I. 44. 

672, 693, 868, v. 203, 230, lhake, P. L. vi. 71 2 ; Co//?. 797; 

643, vi. 666, 828, viii. 6'53, Od. Nat. 162; P/". Ixxxviii. 

IX. 185, 1106, 1110, x. 249, 59, cxiv. 15, cxxxvi. 14. 

7l0\ xi. 78 ; P. R. ii. 292, fhaken, P. L. ix. 287. 

339 ; S. A. 3 ; Lye. 24, 68 ; flmkes, P. L. ii. 711, \ ii. 4/66 ; 

L'Al. 96 • CW. AW. 188; P/ .-//-c. 5S. 

lxxx. 41. Shakipeare, XA4/. 133; Ep. /P. 

fhude, (verb) P. P. v. 277. 5'4. 1. 

ihade to ihade, P. P. ii. 242. iliaUow, P. L. ix. 544 ;. P. P. 

fhaded, P. J,, vi. 885, iv. 327 ; UAL 76; Cow. 514 ; 

liKides, P. L. i. 6b, 303, ii. 621, Son. i. 6 ; Po/t. «/" Co//. 12. 

iii. 734, iv. 23Q, 1015, \ ii. fhaliow-t'earehing, Arc. 41. 

331, ix. 408, x. 86l, xi. 270 ; ftiame, P. 7,. i. 1 15, ii. 58, 4p6. 

P. P. 1. 194, 296, iv. 243, 564, iv. 82, 313, vi. 340, i\. 

404; Luc. 137; L'AL 8; 255, 312. 313, 1058, 10/9, 

JlPenf.28; Arc. 42: Com. 1.094, 1007, 1114, 1 lip, x. 

62, 1 27, ^66, 335, 429, 52 1 , 113,1 59, 33b'. 540, 555, 906", 

580, 984; Son. xiii. 14; xi. 62.9, xii. 102; P. It. iii. 

Brut. 1. 136, iv. 14, 189,342; S. A. 

fhgwfes, (verb) P. P. ix. 266. 106, 446, 4 57, 597, 1579; 

fliadier, I'. L. iv. 705. Son. ix. i I ; (hi. Nat. 40, 80 ; 

ihadieft, P. P. iii. 39. Bp. IV. Sh.9\ Pf : vi. 22, 

ihridins^, P.P. iii. 357> 509; lxxx. 74, lxxxiii. 60, 64. 

P, P. iii. 221. ftiame, (verb) P. L. ix. 384. 

ftiadow, P. P. ii. 669, iii. 120, ftiame with flrame, 6'. ^4. 841. 

6l9, iv. 470, v. 575, ix. 12, ftiam'd, P. P. i. 401, ix. 1139 ; 

x. 264 ; P. Ii. iv. 70. S. A. 563 ; PJ\ lxxxiii. 62. 

fhadowM, P.P. v. 284, viii. fliame-fae'd, Od. Nat. Ill, 

31 1, ix. J055. ftiamefuVP. L, xii. 413 ; P. /?. 

Ihadowipg, P. 7/. vi. 554, 655. iii. 87, iv. 22; S.A. 491, 

Jhadows,P.L. xii. 255; //Ptv//! 1043; .So//, xv. 12. 

13t; Com. 207,470; Orf. ftiamefully, S. A. 4£9. 

Ato. 206, 232. ftiamelefc, CW//. 736. 

lVid'.'A v,. P. /,. iv. 776, v. 43, mames, P. /i. iv. 30.). 

686, xii. 291, 303 , V. R. iv. fhape, P.P. i, 428, 590, ii.448, 

399; L'Al. 108. 64.9, 666.667., 68 1,704, 7 % >6. 

It, P. L. iii 377'. 784., id. 631, iv. 288, 305, 

'.y./\ L. in. 28, iv. 7:0, v. 398, 461,589, 819,835, 848, 

137, 36*7, viii. 262, 286, ix. v. 276, 309, 36'2, \i. 352, viii. 

1057 ; P. P .1.30 1 ; 295. 463, ix. 503, 601, x. 

Arc. 88 ; Com. 38 ; O/. Nat. 333., 450, 495, 5l6, 574, 86>, 

xi. K'9, 239, 297, 467; P.h. 

i, P. L. i. 176, iv. 703; ii. 176, Hi. Uj S,A. 1011 ; 

P. P. iii Com. 52i 400. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fhap'd, P. L. v. 55. 

ihapes, P. L. i. 358, 4-79, 790, 

iii.604, v. 105, 111, vi. 753, 

ix. 1082, xi. 46'7 ; LAI. 4 ; 

II Penf 6 ; Com. 2, 207. 
ihare, P. L. ii. 29, 452, x.961 ; 

S. A. 53; Com. 76'9; Od. 

Cir. 6. 
fliare, (verb) P. X. i. 267, ix. 

831 ; Son. xv. 14. 
ihar'd, P. L. vi. 326"; P.P. iv.S7. 
fliarp, P. P. ii. 902, ix. 584, x. 

511, 977, xi. 63, 800; P.P. 

iii. 324. 
fharpen'd, P. P. iii. 620. 
fharpening, P. L. iv. 978. 
fharpelt, P. L. ix. pi. 
(harpeft-figbted, P. P. iii. 691. 
lharply, P. P. i. 468. 
lhatter, Lye. 5. 
fhatter'd, P. P. i. 232, vi. 301 ; 

S. A. 1241 ; Com. 799- 
(battering, P. X. x. 1066. 
lhaven, 6'. A. 540. 
Jhaves, P. L. ii. 634. 
lheaf, P. P. xi. 435. 
{hearer's, Lye. 117. 
(hears, Lye. 75, Are. 65 ; Fore. 

of Con. l6. 
flieaves, P. I* iv. 984, xi. 430 ; 

HAL 88. 
flied, P. L. iv. 501, viii. 513, 

ix.893, x.631 ; P. P. ii.72; 

Lye. 149; Cow. 652. 
ibed down, P. P. iv. 6'70. 
lhedding, P. P. vii. 375. 
(beds, P. P. i. 597 ; Com. 323. 
Iheen, Cww. S93, 1003 ; Od. Nat. 

135; Ep. M. Win. 73. 
lheeny, Od. D. F. I. 48. 
iheep, Lye. 125; So//, xviii. 6; 

Od.Nat.9l; Pf- lxxx. 3. 
(heep-cote, P. P. ii. 287, 2S8. 
iheep-hook, Lye. 120. 
iheep-walks, P. P. xi. 431. 
il^er, P. L. i. 742, iv. 182, vi. 

325; P. R. iv. 419. 
ihcets, Pyc. ill. 



(hell, P. L v. 342 ; P. ft. ii, 

345; Com. 231, 873. 
(hells, P. L. vii. 407. 
fhelter, P. P. vi. S43 ; P. P. iii. 

221; Cow. 62; Pf lxxxviii. 

29. 
ftielter, (verb) P. L. ii. 167 ; 

P. P. ii. 73. 
fhclter'd, P. L. ii. 233, 824 ; 

P. P. iv. 406, 407. 
ftielters, P.P. ix. 110p. 
(Ivelves, Com. 117. 
fhepherd, P. P. i. 8, xi. 436; 

P. P. ii. 439 ; Lye. 39 ; IA#. 

67; Cow. 93, 271,307,321, 

330, 493, 509, 615, 619, 823, 

908; Pf. lxxx. 1. 
(hepherd's, Lye. 65. 
fhepherds', Lye. 49; Od. Cir. 3. 
(hepherds, P. L. iv. 185, xi. 

650, xii. 365 ; P. R. i. 244 ; 

Lye. 165, 182; i#rt\ 1, 96; 

Cow. 848, 958 ; Od. Nat. 85. 
(hew, J7 Pen/'; 171 ; Cow. 512 ; 

P/. lxxxv. 26, Ixxxvi. 54, 

See alfo (how. 
(hew'th, Son. vii. 4. 
Shibboleth, S. A. 298. 
(hield, P. P. i. 284, 565 f iv. 

785, 990, vi. 192, 255, 543, 

x. 542 ; P. R. iv. 405 ; S. A. 

132, 284, 1122, 1434; Com. 

447, 658 ; Od. Nat. 55 ; Pf. 

iii. 7, v. 39, lxxxiv. 31, 41. 
(hields, P. L. i. 548, 66s. iv. 

553, vi. S3, 102, 305, 337, 

840, ix. 34. 
(hi ft, Cow. 273. 
lhifter, Ep. Hobf. I. 5. 
Jhifts, P. L. ix. 515; P.P. iv. 

308 ;S.^. 1116, 1220; Cow. 
617. 
fhin'd, Son. xxiii. 11. 
fliine, (fubit.) Od. Nat. 202. 
(nine, P. P. iii. 52, 134, iv. 

657, 675, vi. 74$, vii. I OS, 
viii. 155, ix. 104, x. ()52 ; 

P.P. i.9'oi0d. D.F.I. 34; 



VERBAL INDEX, 



Cd.on Time, 16 ; Pf. lxxx. 

15, 31, 79, exxxvi. 33. 
fhine forth, Pf. lxxx. 7. 
ihincs, P. L. iii. 386, 723, iv. 

363, v. 20, vii. 380, viii. 94 ; 

5. A. 1052. 
fhining, P. X. ii. 757, iii. 668, 

670, iv. 283, v. 259, vii. 401; 

Arc. 15. 
(hip, P..L. ix. 513; 5.^.714. 
(hipwreck'd, S. A. 198. 
fhiver'd, P. L. vi. 389 ; Pf. ». 

21. 
(hivering, P. L. x. 1003 ; Pf. 

cxiv. 7. 
(hivcrs, P. P. iv. 19, 
fhoaling, P. L. x. 288. 
(hoals, P. L. vif. 400. 
(hock. P. L. ii. 1014, vi. 207, 

x. 1074 ; Pf. lxxxi. 65. 
(hone, P. L. i. 537, 599, 67% 

ii. 304, iii. 139, 268, 363, 

508, 565, 597, 713, iv. 292, 

vi. 720, 768, vii. 196, 499, 

x. 682, IO96. 
(hook, P. L. i. 105, ii. 353, 

672, 882, iii. 394, v.2S6,vi. 

219, 833, ix. 1124, xi. 492; 

S.A. 1650; Lye. 1J2. 
fhoon, Com. 635. 
(hoot, Com. 81. 
(hoot forth, P. L. vi. 480. 
(hooting, P. L. iv. 556 ; Arc. 16. 
(hoots, P. L. ii. 1036, iii. 586 ; 

Com. 99, 296; Pf. lxxx. 56. 
(hops, Com. 7l6. 
(hore, P.P. i. 284, 310, 585, 

ii. 66l, 912, 1011, iii. 537, 

iv. 162, v. 339, vii. 210, x. 

666, 696, xii. 143, 199, 215 ; 

P. It. iv.93,238, 330; S.A. 

537, 96'2 ; Lye. .183; Com. 

49; Od.Nat. 182. 

without fhorr, P. L. xi. 750. 
fhores, P. L. vii. 417, ix. 117, 

1118; Lye. 154; Com.2Mj. 
(horn, P. X. i. 59o' ; ix. 1062 ; 

& A. 1Q24. 



fhort, P.L. i. 797, iv. 102, 53*5, 

v. 562, ix. 50, 248, 250, 963, 

xi. 147, 184,554, 628; P. P. 

i. 56, iv. 287; S.A. 670 ; 

Son. xiii. 4; 0c?. D. P. 7. 60 ; 

Ep. M. Win. 9. 
(horten'd, Od. Paff. 6 ; Ep. M. 

Win. 52. 
(horter, P. P. iv. 595 ; P. P. $; 

269. 
fhorteft, P. P. x. 1005. 
lhortly, 5, ^f. 598. 
(hot, P. P. i. 172, ii. 67, iii. 

618, iv. 658, v. 141, viii. 62 9 

ix. 72 ; P. P. iii. 323. 
(hot down, P. P. v. 301. 
(hot forth, P. L. v. 15, vi. 849. 
(hot through, P. L. vi. 15. 
(hot up, Pp. iV/. Win. 40. 
(hove, Xyc. 118. 
(houlder, P. P. v. 279 ; Pf. 

lxxxi. 22. 
(houlders, P. X. i. 287, ii. 306, 

iii. 627, iv. 303 ; P. R. ii. 

462 ; S. A. 146, 1493 ; It 

Penf. 36. 
(hout, P. P. i. 542, ii. 520, iii. 

345, vi. 96, 200, vii. 256, x. 

505 ; S.A. 1472, 1510, l620 f 

Com. 103. 
(houting, S. A. 1473. 
(how, (fubft.) P. P. iv. 122, 

viii. 538, ix.492, 665, x. 187, 

442, 883, 1004 ; P. R. ii. 226, 

459, iv. 110; Son.xxi. 12. 
(how, P. L. ii. 273, iii. 255, 

iv. 558, vi. l6l, 627, vii. 

406, viii. 115, x. 870, 

1065, xi.357, 384, 709, xii. 

123; P.P. i. 141, iv. 554; 

S.A. 58, 910, 1340, l60J, 

l6'44 ; Arc. 79 r Co?n. 6'2J ', 

Od. Nat. 227 \ 0d. D. F. I. 

61 ; Pf iv. 26. 
(how'd, P. L. vii. 555, xi. 245 ; 

Od. D.F.I. 35; Fp. II*lf 

1.15. 
Pww'dil, 5'. ^.781* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



&ow forth, P.R. iii. 124. 
fnovver, P. X. ii. 49 1, vi. 545 ; 

It Pen/. 127; Ep.MJVin.40. 
fhower, (verb) P. X. x. 662, xi. 

883, xii. 124. 
ftowerd, P. X. iv. 152, 773, v. 

640. 
(howers, P. X. iv. 646, 653, v. 

190; P. P. iii. 324; %c. 

140 ; Pf. lxxxiv. 24. 
(howers-, (verb) P. X. ii. 4. 
ihowery, P. X. vi. 759. 
fliown, P. X. i. 218, iv. 1012, 

vi. 247 ; P. R. i. 276, ii. 13, 

51, 84, iii. 350, 401, iv. 88; 

S. A. 994, 1475 ; Com. 745 ; 

Pf. cxiv. 5. 
fhow'ft, P. X. ii. 818 ; P. # iv. 

121. 
Jhows, (fubft.) P. X. iv. 316, 

viii. 575. 
(hows, P. X. viii. 553, xi. 194 ; 

P. R. iii. 286, i v. 220, 221. 
fhrewd, Com. 846. 
fhriek, Od. Nat. 17S. 
fhriek'd, P. P. iv. 423. 
Shrieks, UAL 4, 
drill, P. X. v. 7 ; L'Al. 56. 
ihrine, P. L. iii. 379, vii. 360, 

xi. 13; P. P. i. 438; Arc. 

36 1 Com. 267; Od. Nat. 17 6. 
fhrin'd, P. X. vi. 672. 
ftirines, P. X. i. 388. 
ihrink, P. X. ii. 205, iv. 925, 

xi. 846; P. R. ii. 223; Com. 

656. 
fhrinks, Or/. JBfaf. 203. 
fhroud, P. X. x. 106S ; Lye. 

22; Co/w. 316; Od. Nat. 

218. 
fhrouded, P. R. iv. 419. 
fhrouds, P. X. ii. 1044; Cow. 

147. 
flirub, P. £. iv. 696, v. 349, 

vii. 322, viii. 517. 
fhrubby, Coin. 306. 
fhrubs, P. X. iv. 176. 
ihrunk, Lijc. 133. 



fhuddering, P. X. ii. 6l6; Com. 

802. 
fhun, P. X. ii. 531, 810, viii. 

327, 328, ix. 483, x. 339, 

1062. 
fhunn'd, P. X. i. 606, ii. 679* 

1019, iv. 319, ix. 331,699; 

P. R. i. 414 ; -Son. ix. 2. 
fhunning, P. L. ix. 1108. 
fhunn'ft, II Pen/. 61. 
fhut, (fubft.) P. X. ix. 278. 
ihut, P. X. ii. 358, 776, 883, 

iii. 193, 333, ix. 691, xi. 

849. 

faft fhut, P. L. viii. 240. 
fhut out, P. X. iii. 50. 
fhut up, S. A. l60. 
fhuts, Com. 978. 
Sibma, P. X. i. 410. 
Sibyl, Vac. Ex. 69. 
Sichem, P. X. xii. 136, 
Sicilian, Xyc. 133. 
lick, P. X. xi. 490. 
ficken, Od.Nat. 137- 
iicken'd, Ep. Hobf.\\.l5. 
ficknefs, P. X. xi. 524 ; S. A. 

69S. 
fide, P. X. i. 78, 207, 232, 

782, ii. 101, 871, 1006, iii. 

366, iv. 257, 484, 485, v. 

11, 393, vi. 133, viii. 536, 

ix. 265, 965, 1153, x. 8S1, 

xi. 176, 246, 731, xii. 641 ; 

P. R. ii. 136, 184, iii. 154, 

255, iv. 25 ; S. A. 1432 ; 

L'Al. 55; Com. 185, 283, 

295, 1009 ; Od. PaJ. 21 ; Pf. 

Ixxx. 45. 
fide-by-fide, P. X. iv, 741. 
fide-to-tide, Com. 313. 
fide, (verb) P. X. ii. 905. 
fidelong, P. X. iv. 333, vi. 197, 

ix. 512. 

each fide, P. X. i. 578, x. 
388 ; P. R. iv. 33 ; S. A. 
1617. 

either fide, P. X. ii. 649, iv. 
695, vi.221, 844, x. 415. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

every fide, P. L. vi. 554; 56l, 683, 828, 867, xi. 19, 

P. R. i. 295. 184, 201, 281,413,41s, 448, 

hither fide, P. L. iii. 722, xi. 463, 494, 555, 872, 890, xii. 

574. 9; P-R- '-271, 310, ii. 56, 

left fide, P. L. ii. 755, viii, iii. 351, iv. S6; S. ^. 67, 93, 

465. 152, 157, 196, 645, 914, 

other fide, P. L. ii, 108, 706, 1117, 1294, 1415, 1542, 

iv. 179, 985, ix, 888; 1620, 1687; H Ptnf. 14; 

P. R. iv. 159 ; S. A. 246, Son. xxii. 4, xxiii. 8, 10 ; Od. 

768, l609, Kat. 109; Od.on Time, 18; 

right fide, P. L. vi.327. P/. v. 12, vii. 28, Ixxx. 10. 

that fide, P. L. iii. 427- in fight, S. A. 24. 

this fide, P. L. iii. Jl f xii. fights, P. L, i. 64, xi. 411; 

114; P.P. ii. 23. L'AL iv. 129, 

fide-board, P. R. ii. 350. fign, P. X. i. 672, ii. 760, iv. 

fide-to^fidc, Son. xxii, 12, 428, 998, 1011, v. 194, vi. 

fideral, P. X. x. 693. 58, 776, viii. 342, 514, x. 

fide-ways, Ep. M. Win. 42. 1091 , 1 103, xi. 351, 860, xii, 

fides, P.L. i.6l,iv. 135; S.A, 442; P. R. ii. 89, 119, iv. 

1241 ; UAL 32 f 483 ; Com. 654 ; Pf. Ixxxvi, 

all fides, P, L. ii. 1015, vi. 61. 

335, x. 507. fignal, P. L. i. 278, 347, 776, 

fiding, Com. 212. ii. 56, 717, v. 705, viii. 632, 

Sidonian, P. L. i. 441. xi. 72, xii. 593 ; S. A. 338. 

fiege, P. L. ii. 343, ix. 121, xii. figns, P. L. i. 605, iv. 429, v. 

74. 134, vi. 789, vii. 341, ix. 1077, 

fieges, S. A. 846. xi. 182, 194, xii. 175; P. R. 

Sierra Liona, P. X. x. 703. i. 394, iv. 489; Com. 5/2, 

fift, P. R. iv. 532. 845. 

figh, P. L.xi. 147. filence, P. L. i. 83, 56l, 797, 

figli'd, P. L. ii, 788, ii. 43 1, 994, iii. 218, iv. 600, 

fighing, P. X, xi. 147; 0d. Nat. 604, v. 39, 557, 668, vi. 64, 

186; Pf. vi. 11. 385, 408, vii. 106, 2l6, 594, 

fighs, P.L. i. 621, iv. 31, x. ix. 895, x. 353,459, xi. 699; 

1090, 1102, ix. 5, 23, 31 ; P, It, iv. 22, 43; S. A. 49, 

P. R. ii. 65 ; S. A. 392 ; 0d. 236, 428, 864 ; 77 Penf. 55 ; 

Cir. 8 ; Pf. ixxxviii. 6\ Com. 250, 552, 557 ; Od. Cir, 

fight, P. X. ii. 745, 749, iii. 43, 5 ; Vac. Ex. 5. 

^55,61, 256, 554,4)15,655, filent, P.L. ii. 547, 582, iii. 

iv. 34, 217, 287, 319, 505, 267, iv. 647, 654, 9^, v. 39, 

573, 577 ', 658, v. 46, 138, 202, vi. 523, 882, vii. 444* 

257, 308, 448, 536, 6()*5,7H, viii. \63, ix. 195, 1063; 

765, vi. 36, 111, 118, 191, P. R. ii. 261; S. A. 87, 

792, 86'2, vii. 185, 368, viii. 3732 ; Com. 481 ; If, lxxxiri, 

41,63, 120, 461, 527, ix. 91, 1. 

294,310,451,517,565,861, filently, P. L. ii, 842, v, 130, 

693, x. 223, 524, 350, 538, filk, Com. 710". 



VERBAL INDEX. 



*Utvn,P.ll. iv. 76; 5. ^.730; 
Od. D.V.I. 2. 

filly, Od. Nat. 92. 

Silo,- S. A. 1674. 

Siloe's,P. L. i. 11. 

iilver, P. L. iii. 595, 644, iv. 
609, vii. 437 ; Arc. 16; Com; 

• 222, 865 ; Od. Nat. 128. 

filver-bulkin'd, Arc. 33. 

filver-fhafted, Com. 443. 

Simeon, P. P. i. 255, ii. 87. 

iimilitude, P. L. iii. 384, vii. 
520, xi. 512. 

Simon, P. P. ii. 7. 

iinapie, P. L. xii. 365 ; P. P. 
ii. 348. 

fimples, Com. 627. 

fimplicity, P. L. iii. 687, iv. 
318. 

fimply, P. L. xii. 569. 

fin, P. L. i. 485, ii. 76O, 1024, 
iii. 177, 464, iv. 517, 758, 
840, vi. 396, 506, 691, vii. 
546, ix. 12, 2£)2, 327, 1003, 
1044, x. 16', 133, 172, 230, 
234, 251, 352, 407, 473,490, 
586, 590,631,635,708,791, 
xi. 55, 427, 519, 678, xii. 
285, 289, 290, 429, 431, 443, 
474; P.P. i. 73, 159, iii. 
147; S. A. 313, 499, 504, 
1357; Con?. 126, 456, 465; 
Od. Nat. 138; Od. Cir. 12; 
Od. D. F. I. 66; Od. Sol. 
Muf. 1 8 ; Fore, of Con. 4 ; Pf. 
iv. 19, Ixxx. 74, lxxxiv. 40, 
lxxxv, 7p 

fin-born, P. L. x. 596. 

fm-bred, P. L. iv. 315. 

fin-worn, Com. 17 . 

Sinaean, P. L. xi. 390. 

Sinai. P # L f i, 7, xii. 227; Od. 
Nat. 158. 

fmcc, P. L. i, 116, 118, 144, 
245, 582, ii. 197, 223, 817, 
iii. 3, 495, iv. 69, 71, 193, 
323, 341, 581, 6l2, 905, 
X008, v. 71, 363, 774, 843, 



vi. 154, 433, 686, 702, 820, 
vii. 80, viii. Ill, 347, 645, 
ix. 25, 60, 140, 174, 360, 
412, 497, 672, 699, 710, 
1019, 1070, x. 170, 233, 241, 
251, 793, 853, 962, xi. 74, 
85, 148, 160, 393, 509, 524, 
xii. 83,90, 6i3; P.P. i. 51, 
52, 147, 484, ii. 100, 107, 
358, iii. 122, iv. 172, 368; 
S.A. 165, 843, 884, 1502; 
Od. D. F. I. 8 ; Pf. vii. 38. 

fineere, P. L. iii. 103, 192, ix. 
320, x. 915, xi. 443; P.P. 
ii. 480, iii. 435 ; 8, A. 874. 

fmcerely, Com. 454; Od. on 
Time, 14. 

fincereft, P. L. x. 37. 

finews, S. A. 1142 ; Com. 6l5; 
Vac. Ex. 1. 

finful, P.L. iii. 186, viii. 506, 
xi. 105; P.P. i. 162 ; Od. 
Nat. 41. 

iinfulnefs, P. L. xi. 360. 

fing, P. L. i. 6, ii. 242, 547, 
553, vi. 744, vii. 24, xi. 619, 
xii. 244, 324 ; P. R. i. 2, iv. 

339; Eye. 10, 180; VAl. 17; 

IlPenf.48, 105, 143; Arc. 

65, 86; Com. 623, 983; Son. 

i. 9, xiii, 13; Od. Nat. 5; 

Od. Paf. 4 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 

28 ; Vac. Ex. 45 ; Pf. vii. 63, 

lxxxi. 1, 2; lxxxvii. 25. 
fmged, P. L. i. 236, 614 ; Com. 

928. 
fingeth, VAL 65. 
finging, P. L. iv. 684, v. 198 ; 

P. P. i. 171 ; Lye. 180; VAl. 

42; CW. Sol. Muf. 16; Fee. 

Pr, 63. 
fingle, P. L. iii. 469, iv- 856, 

v. 552, 903, vi. 30, 233, vjii. 

403, viii. 423, ix. 325, 339, 

536, x. S17, xi. 644, 703; 

P.P. i. 323, iv. 384, 517; 

5.^.344, 1092, 1111,1210, 

1222 ; Com. 204, 369, 402; 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fingly, P. L. i. 379 1 S. A. 244. 
lings, P. X. iii. 39, iv. 769; 

L'Al.7; Vac. Ex. 37. 
fmg'ft, Cow. 567. 
Angular, P. X. v. 851. 
Angularly, P. it. iii. 57. 
unifier, P. X. x. 886. 
fink, P. X. iii. 331. 
finks, P. X. ii. ^50 ; Lj/c. 168. 
finlefs, P. X. vii. 6l, ix. 659, 

x. 690 < P. P. iv. 425. 
finn'd, P. X. vi. 402, x. 229, 

516, 790, 930, xi. 427. 
finners, Pf i.3, 14. 
finning, P. X. vi. 66l. 
fins, P. X. iii. 233, xii. 283, 

316, 416; P.P. i. 266. . 
fins, (verb) P. X. iii. 204. 
finuous, P. X. vii. 481. 
Sion, P. X. i. 10, 386, 442, iii. 

30, 530 ; Pf. ii. 13, lxxxiv. 

28, lxxxvii. 18. 
Sion's, P. X. i. 453; P. it. iv. 

347 ; Pf. lxxxvii. 5. 
fip, Cow. 811. 
fips, //Pew/172. 
fire, P.X. ii. 264, 817, 849, i v. 

144, 712, 719, v. 350, vi. 95, 

viii. 39, 218, 249, xi. 460, 

719, 736, 862, xii. 368, 46V; 

P. P. i. 86, 233 ; S. A. 326, 

1456; L^c. 103; Vac. Ex. 

39. 
Sirocco, P. I. x. 706. 
firs, Son. xi. 8. 
Sifera, S. ^. 990; Pf lxxxiii. 

35. 
finer, P. X. vii. 10; X'^/. 15; 

II Penf 18; Com. 350, 36'5, 

407, 414, 486. 
fitters, P. L. x. 674; lye. 15, 

99; i7*. exxxvi. 34. 
lifter's; Cow. 40S. 
lit, P. X. ii. 54, 56, 139, 329, 

359, 377, 859, ni. 315, v. 

369, viii. 210, ix. 3, 164, 

KH/8, x. 235, 421; P. R. i. 
ii, .",6fi. 377, 431. iii. 



153, iv. 123, 146; S.A.A, 

566, 1017, 1500, 1608 ; II 

Penf 170; Arc. 64; Cow. 

382, 625, 659; Od. Nat. 11, 

68, 144, 244; Od. Paff. 41 ; 

Pf. lxxxiii. 3. 
fithe, P. L. x. 6o6;L'Al. 66, 
fits, P. X. i. 785, ii. 243, 456, 

731, 803, 907, iii. 57, v. 25, 

vi. 671, 892; Arc. 91; Com. 

389, 818, 881,957, 1002 ; Od. 

Nat, 202 ; Od. Sol, Muf 8 ; 

Ep. M. Win. 18. 
fit'ft, P. L. iii. 376, iv. 578, v. 

156; Ep. M. Win. 6l ; Pf 

lxxx. 5. 
Sittim, P.L. i. 413. 
fitting, P. X. ii. 164, iv, 829; 

P. P. ii. 212, iii. 164, iv. 

107; S. A. 1491; // Penf. 

40; Arc. 18; Ccwt, 472, 860. 
fitting ftill, P. X. viii. 89. 
fituate, P. X. vi. 641, 
fituation, P. L. i. 60. 
fix, P. X. v. 277, vii. 568, 601, 

viii. 128, ix. 137; P.P. i. 

210; Ep. Hobf. II. 20. 
fixth, P. X. vii. 449. 
fize, P. X. i, 197, vi. 352; 

S.J, 1249. 
ikies, X'^/. 43; 7/ Pew/. 39; 

Cow. 242; Od.PaJ.U. 
fkiff, P. X. i. 204. 
fkilful, P. X. ix. 513. 
fkill, P. X. ii. 272, viii. 573, ix. 

39, 1112; P. P. iii. 17, iv. 

40, 52, 552; S. A. 757; Arc. 
79 ; Cow. 273 ; Son. xiii. .*>. 

fkill'd, P. X. ix. 42 ; P. Ii. ii, 

l6l ; Cow. 523, 620. 
fkin, //or. i. 6. 
ikins, P.X. x. 217, 220. 
flcip. Pf cxiv. 11. 
fkipt, P/: cxiv. 13. 
Ikirt, P. L. vi. 80. 
Ikiitcd, P.X. v. 282. 
fkirts, P. X. iii, 380, v. 187, xi« 

332, 882. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



fty, P. X. i. 45, 730, ii. 534, 
710, iii. 324, 426, 514, iv. 
455, 721, 988 3 v, 189, 267, 
. vi. 772, vii. 287, 442, viii. 
258, ix, 1002, x. 1064, xi. 
209, 742, xii. 182; P. R. ii. 
156, iv. 453; S. A. 1472, 
1610; Lye. 171 ; Com. 957, 

979. 
fky-robes, Com. 83. 
fky-tin&ured, P. X. v. 285. 
pack, (adj.) P. L. ix. 892; 

P. R. iii. 398 ; Pf. ixxxv. 2. 
flack,P.X.ii.46l,iv.l64;P/.. 

viii. 7, 
Slacken, P. X. ii. 214 ; P. R. ii. 

{lacken'd, & ^. 738. 

fiacknefs, P. X. xi. 634. 

flain, P. X. x. 217, xi. 455, xii. 

414; S.A. 439, 1516, 1664, 

1668 ; Son. xviii. 7 ; Sen. 1 ; 

Pf lxxxiii. 38, Ixxxviii. 19. 
flake, Od. D. F. I. 66. 
glanderous, P. X. xii. 536. 
flant, P. X. x. 1075. 
(lave, S.A. 1224, 1392. 
flaveries, S. A. 485. 
Slavery, S. A. 418 ; P/ exxxvi. 

83. 
(laves, P. X. xii. 167; S. A. 41, 

367, 1162. 
flavifh, S. A. 122; Cow. 218; 

Pf lxxxi. 21. 
(laughter, P. X. vi. 506, xi. 

659; P- #• Hi. 75; 5. A. 

1518, 1583. 
flaughter'd, S. A. 1530, 1667; 

So??, xviii. 1. 
ilaugbtering, Od. D. F. I. 68. 
flay, Od. D.F.I. 21. 
flaying, S.A. 1517. 
{leek, Lye. 99 ; X'^. 30; So?z. 

xi. 10. 
(leek-enamell'd, P. X. ix. 525. 
fleek'd, P. P. iv. 5. 
fleeking, Cow, 882. 
deep, P f X. iji, 329, iv. 449, 



614, 658, 735, 826, 883, y. 

3, 96, 120, 668, 673, 679, 

vii. 106, viii. 253, 287, 458, 

ix. 190, 1044, 1049, x. 779* 

xii. 434, 611 ; P. R. iv. 409; 

S. A. 459, 629; II Penf 

146; Com. 122, 554; Od. 

Nat. 155. 
fleep, (verb) P. X. iv. 678, 

773, 826, x. 779, xi. 368 ; 

P. iL^ii. 284; Pf. iv. 38, 

Ixxxviii. 18. 
fleeping, P. X. i. 333, viii. 463, 

ix. l6l, xii. 608; P. R. i. 

311; S.A. 990, 1113; Od. 

Nat. 242 ; Vac. Ex. 64. 
fleeplefs, P. X. xi. 173 ; P. £. 

ii. 460. 
fleeps, P. X. ii. 489, iii. 6S6, 

vii. 414, viii. l6"4. 
fleep'fl, P. X. v. 38, 673 , Lye. 

160. 
Aeepy, P. X. ii. 73. 
fleet, P. Jl. iii. 324. 
fleights, P. X. ix. 92. 
flender, P. L. iv. 304; Od. 

Hor. 1. 
flept, P. X. iv. 707, 771, v. 654, 

ix. 187; P. P. ii. 263, 271, 

iv. 407, 413 ; Pf iii. 13. 
flept'ft, P. X. xi. 639. 
flew, P. X. xi. 609, 678. 
flew'ft, 6'. ^. 439. 
flide, Vae. Ex. 4; P/I lxxxvi. 

40. 

Aiding, Cow. 892 ; Od. Nat. 47. 

flight, P. X. iv. 181 ; P. P. iii. 

109, 349, iv. 155; S.A. 59, 

1229; Pac. Ex. 19. 

flight, (verb) P. X. vii. 47; 

5. ^. 940. 
flighted, Lye. 65. 
flighteft, P. R. iii. 128. 
flighting, P.P. ii. 124. 
llightly, P. X. iv. 967', P. P. ii. 

198. 
flime, P. X. ix. l65, x. 298, 
530. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



flimy, P. X. x. 286. 

fling, P. X. x. 633. 

flingers, S. A. 1619. 

flip, P. X. i. 178; Com. 743; 

£ J p. 3^. Win. 35. 
flipping, P. P. iv. 216. 
flips, Od. Nat. 2S4. 
flipt, Com. 498. 
flits, Xyc. 76. 
flop'd, Lye. 31. 
flope, P. X. i. 223, iv. 26l, 591 ; 

Com. 98. 
floth, P. X. ii. 227, vi. 166, xi. 

794. 
flothful, P.X.ii. 117. 
flough, Ep. Hobf. I. 4. 
flow, P. L. ii. 337, 582, 902, 

iii. 193, iv. 173, vi. 533, viii. 

110, x. 692, xi. 207, xif. 

648; P. R. iii. 172, 224; 

Lye. 103 ; II Pen/. 76 ; Com. 

232, 1015; Son. vii. 9; P/. 

lxxxv. 55, lxxxvi. 55. 
flow-endeavouring, Ep. IV. Sh. 

9- 

flow-pae'd, P. X. x. 960. 
floweft, P. L. x. 859- 
flowly, P. X. iv. 541. 
flue'd, P. X. i. 702. 
fluce, P. L. v. 133 ; ^rc. 30. 
fluces, P. X. xi. 849- 
ilumber, P.X. L 377 ; X'^/. 

146 ; Com. 110, 260, 1001. 
flumber, (verb) P. X. i. 321. 
flumber'd, P. X. iv. 24. 
flumbering, P. X. i. 203, ix. 23 ; 

UAL 54 ; Arc. 57. 
flumberous, P. X. iv. 6l5. 
fluinbers, P. X. vii. 29. 
flunk, P. X. iv. 602, ix. 784, 

x.332. 
fly, P. X.iv. 347,537;957, ix. 

256,613; P. P.ii. 115; Co///. 

525, 571. 
foal!, P. X. i. 204, 575, ii, S3, 

258,607,5)22, iii. 428, v. 258, 

.322, vi. 311, 437, vii. $6&, 

486, viii. 92, 105, ix. 6^, 



1018, x. 306, xi. 734, 753, 

xii. 566; P.R. i. 66 t 403, 

iii. 56, iv. 35, 92, 564; S.A. 

1223, 1261 ; Com. 295, 620, 

629 ; Vac. Ex. 9, 16. 
fmaller, P. X. vii. 433. 
fmalleft, P. X. i. 779, 789, ii. 

1053, vi. 137, vii. 477; 

P. R. i. 450. 
fmart, P. X. iv. 102 ; Od. Cir. 

25 ; Od. D. F. I. 69. 
fmear'd, P. X. xi. 731 ; Com. 

917. 
fmell, P. X. ii. 664, iv. 165, 

217, 265, v. 14, viii. 527, ix. 

197, 450, 581, 740, 852, x. 

272, xi. 38, 281; P.R. ii. 

351; S.A. 544. 
fmell, (verb) P. L. v. 411. 
fmelling, P. X. vii. 319. 
fmells, P.X. v. 127, 379; P-#. 

ii. 365; Cow. 99 1. 
fmelt, //Wo/*. 2. 
fmilM, P. X. iii. 364, 6SS, iv. 

499, v.378, vi.784, vii. 502, 
viii. 265, 851, x. 679; Com. 
252. 

fmile, P. X. ii. 486, iv. 7^5 f 
viii. 368, 618; P. P.ii. 193. 

fmile, (verb) P.X. iii. 257; 
S. A. 94S, 1057. 

fmilcs, P. X. iv. 337, ix. 222, 
239, xi- 624 ; VAl. 28. 

fmiles, (verb) P. X. iv. l65 r 

500, v. 124, ix. 480. 
fmiling, P. X. iv. 903, v. 168, 

718, xi. 175; P. R. i. 129; 

Od. Nat. 151. 
fault, P. X. iii. 29. 
finite, P. X. vi. 324 ; Xj/c. 131. 
fmites, Arc. 52. 
fmitten, P. 7i. iv. 562. 
fmoaks, UAL 81. 
fin oaky, Co;?/. 324. 
fmoko, P. X i. 237, 671, ii. 

889, 928, vi. 57, 585, 7^ i 

Com. 5, 6'55. 
fmok'd, P. X. 1. 493. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



f moking, Pf. Ixxx. 19. 
ftnooth, P. X. i. 450, 725, ii. 
8 16, 902, iv. 459, 480, v. 
342, vii. 409, viii. 166', ix. 
1095, x. 305, xi. 615 ; P.P. 
i.479, ii- 16'4, iv. 295;^.^. 
872, 1049; Arc. 84; Com. 
290, 825 ; Son. xiii. 8 ; Vac. 
Ex. 100 ; Pf. v. 28. 
fmooth-dittied, Com. 86. 
fmooth-hair'd, Com. 716. 
fmooth-fiiaven, II Penf. 66. 
imooth-iliding, P. L. viii. 302 ; 

Lye. 86. 
imoothed, P. X.i. 772, iv. 120. 
fmoother, Son. xx. 6. 
fmoothing, UPtnf. 58. 
fmooths, P. X. v. 626. 
fmote, P. X. i. 298, iv. 244, vi. 
250, 591, x. 295, xi. 445 ; 
S. A. 990 ; P/: iii. 20, cxxxvi. 
38. 
fmouldering, Od. Nat 159. 
fmutty, P. X. iv. 817- 
fnake, P. L. in. 91, 6l3, 643, 
x. 218, xi. 426; S. A. 763. 
fnaky, P. X. ii. 724, vii. 484, 
x. 559; P. it. i. 120; Od. 
Nat. 226. 
fnaky-headed, Cow. 447. 
fiiare, P. X. iv. 8, xi. 165, xii. 
31; P.P. i. 441, ii. 454; 
, S. A. 230, 532, 931 ; Com. 

567. 
fnare, (verb) P. X. x. 873. 
fnares, P. X. x. 897 ; P.ii. iii. 
191, iv. 611 ; 6'. A 409, 845; 
Com. 164; Od Pajj\ 11. 
fnatch, P. ii. ii. 56. 
fnatch'd, P.L. x. 1025, xi. 

670 ; Com. 815. 
fneezc, P. ii. iv. 458. 
fnow, P. X. ii. 491, 591, x. 685, 
698, 1063; Od. Nat. 39; 
, Vac. Ex. 32. 
fnow-foft, Od. D. F. I. 19. 
fnowy, P. L. i. 515, iii. 432, 
x.432;S,^.#28;Co/«.927, 



fnuff'd, P.L.x. 272. 

foak'd, 5. A 1726. 

foar, P. X. i. 14, iv. 829, v. 270 ? 

vii. 3; P.P. i. 230; Com. 

1016 ; Fac. £.r. 33. 
foar'd, P. X. ix. 170. 
foaring, P. X. vi. 243, vii. 421. 
foars, P. L. ii. 634; J/Pfw/. 52. 
fober, P. X. iv. 599, xi. 621 ; 

II Pcnf. 32 ; Com. 263, 766. 
fociable, P.L. v. 221. 
fociably, P. X. xi. 234. 
fecial, P. L. viii. 429. 
ibcieties, Lye. 179- 
ibciety, P. L. viii. 383, 586, ix,. 

249, 1007; P. R. i. 302. 
fock, L'^/. 132. 
Socrates, P. P. iii. 96, iv. 274. 
Sodom, P. X. i. 503, x. 562. 
foever, S.A. 1015. 
Sofala, P. L. xi. 400. 
loft, P. L. i. 424, 551, 56l, ii. 

276, 400, 601, iv. 334, 471» 

4,79, 615, 646, 667, v. 193, 

vii. 436, 59S, viii. l65, 166, 

254, 288, ix. 186, 458, x. 98, 

865, xi. 584, 848 ; P. R. ii. 

364, iv. 583 ; S. A. 1036 ; 

Lye. 44; L'Al. 136; Com. 

86,258,555,681, 8S2, 1001; 

Son. i. 8; Od. Cir. 5; Od. 

D.F.I. 2; P/. lxxxvii. 27 ? 

cxiv. 18. 
foft-ebbing, P. X. vii. 300. 
lbft-touching, P.L. v. 17. 
foften, P.L. iii. 189; P. ii- »• 

163. 
foften'd, P. X. viii. 147, xi. 

1 10 ; S. A. 534 ; d. Faff. 46. 
foftening, P. L. vii. 280. 
fofter, 0<z\ Pqf. 27. 
fof'telt, P. X.'ix. 1041. 
foftly, S.A. 115; 1/ Penf. 150; 

CW. J\ta. 47. 
foftnefs, P. X. iv. 298. 
Sogdiana, P.P. iii. 302. 
foil, P.L. i. 242, 562,691, u. 

270, 90*, iv. 214, vi. 510, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



viix. 147, x. 293, 526, xi. 
$8, 262, 270, 292, xii. 18, 
129; P--R. iv. 239; Lye 
78; Arc. 101 ; Cow. 635; 
P/. lxxxi. 23. 

foil, (verb) Com. 16, 427. 

foil'd,5.-4. 141. 

fojourn, (fubft.) P. L. iii. 15; 
P. Pt. iii.235 

fojourn, P. X. xii. 159. 

fojourn'd, P. L. vii. 249« 

fojourners, P. L. i, 309, xii. 

' 192. 

folace, P. L. iv. 486, vi. 905, 
viii. 419, ix. 844, 1044; 
P. R. iv. 334 ; Com. 348. 

folac'd, P. L. vii. 434* 

folaces, S.^. 915. 

Soldan's, P. L. i. 764. 

foldiery, S. A. 1498. 

fole, P. L. i. 124, l60, 237, ii. 
325,827, iii. 9^, 95, 276, iv, 
53, 411, 683, 751, 923, v. 28, 
272, vi. 808, 880, vii. 47, viii. 
329, ix. 135, 227, 533, 653, 
x. 401, 935,941, 973, xii. 
564; P.P. i. 100, ii. 110, 
iii. 26 ; S. A. 376. 

folemn, P. L. i. 390, 557,755, 
iii. 351, iv. 648, 655, v. 6l8, 
▼iii, 78, 149, 202, 435, 595, 
xi. 236, xii. 364; P. P. i. 
133; S.A. 12, 359, 983, 
1311; Lye. 179; U Penf. 
117; Arc. 7; Cotw.457; 0</. 
Nat. 17, 115; Od. Sol. Muf. 
9;J^£#.49;P/.lxxxi. 12. 

folemn-breathing, Co7?i. 555. 
more folemn, P. L. v. 354. 

folemneft, 6'. ^4. 1147- 

folemnitics, Coot. 746. 

fok'innitv, Arc. 39 ; Com. 142. 

lblemmVd, P; Ii. vii. 448. 

folemnize, S, A. 1656. 

folemnly, S.A. 678, 1731. 

foiicit, P. L. viii. 167, x. 744. 

felicitation, S. A. 488. 

ittliOtv-Mons, P. P. 1. 152, 



folicited, P. L. ix. 743 ; & A 
852. 

folicitous, P. X. x. 428 ; P. R, 
ii. 120, iii. 200. 

folidy P. L. i. 229, ii. 878, vi. 
323, viii. 93, x. 286, 884 ; 
P.P. iv. 18, 358; Son. xxu 
10; jP/I cxXxvi. 22. 

folitary, P. JLrfi. 632, vi. 139, 
vii. 46l, viii. 402, xii. 496 ; 
llPcnf. 24. 

folitude, P. X. iii, 69, vii. 28 ? ^ 
viii. 364, 369, ix.249, 1085,. 
X, 105; P. P.i, 91^302, ii.- 
304 ; Com. 376. 

Solomon, P. L. i. 401 ; P. P. ii, 
170, 201,206. 

folftice, Od. Pqff. 6. 

folftitial, P.L. x. 656, 

folv'd, P. R. iv. 573, 574 ; S. A* 
1200. 

folve, P. L. viii. 55. 

folution, P. L, vi. 694, viii. 14 ; 
S.A. 306. 

fome, P. L. i. 204, 205, 294, 
524, 731, 732, 783, ii. 2, 83, 
128, 345, 348, 363, 397, 924, 
936, 977, iii- 183,211,428,- 
459, 546, 548, 549, 628, 700, 
iv. 59,61, 189,255, 281,404, 
426,531, 747,793,816, v. 
290, 311, 54U 554, vi. l6l, 
279i431, vii. 482, viii. 147, 
152,278, 534, ix. 271, S54, 
361 , 638, 669, 670, 672, 904, 
1002, 1085, 1095, x. 52, 246, 
575, 57S, 626, 668, 671,787, 
894, 900, 976, 1029, 1068, 
xi. 103, 193, 198, 231, 425, 
450,471,557, 569, 851, xii, 
16, 99, 293, 612, 645 ; P. R. 
i. 183,290,305, ii. 95, 306, 
iii. 294, iv. 423, 424, 521 ; 
S. A. 17, 28, 258, 526, 664, 
680, 812, 1253, 1382, 1444, 
146l, 1536, 1550; Lye. 14, 
19; LAI. 5, 55, 57, 79* 
It Pnif. 75, 86, 139, 153 j 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Com. U6, 239, 299, 337,339, 

348, 353, 432, 481, 484, 485, 

576,658,801, 821, 858 ; Son. 

i. 10, vii. 8, xi.6; Od. Nat. 

147 ; Od. D. F. I. 56 ; Ep. 

M. Win. 35, 57 ; Vac. Ex. 

93; Od.Hor.2-, Hor. II. 2; 

Pf. lxxxvi. 6l. 
fome one, P. L. vi. 503 ; Com. 

483. 
fomething, P. L. viii. 13, 201, 

ix. 845, x. 1014, xi. 207 ; 

P.R. i. 96; S.A. 1383; 

Com. 246, 783 ; Od. D. F. I. 

34; Vac. Ex. 67. 
fome time, P. L. ix. 824. 
fometimes, P. L. ii. 632, 633, 

iii. 32, 517, iv. 27,29, v. 79, 
vi. 148, 242, vii. 496, viii. 
268, ix. 249, 675, xii. 97 ; 
P. JR. i. 304, 330, 367, ii. 13, 
277 i L'AL9l;IlPenf.97', 
Com. 380 ; Son. xx. 3. 

fomewhat, P. L. ii. 521, vi. 
6l6 ; P. R. i. 433 ; S. A. 
1244; Lye. 17. 

fomewhere, P. L. ix. 256. 

ion, P. L. i. 339, 513, 580, ii. 
678, 728, 743, 804, 818, iii. 
151, 168, 169, 286, 343, 384, 
398, iv. 170,278,716,757, 
v. 285, 519,597, 719, 733, 
743, 847, 855, vi. 676, 678, 
680, 681, 719, 725, 824, 887, 
vii. 38, 135, 138, 192, 518, 
ix. 19, 176, 441, x. 56, 64, 
70, 183, 235, 363, 384, 634, 
645, 760, xi. 20, 46, 72, 808, 
xii. 64, 80, 101, 153, 160, 
161, 268, 327, 332,381,388 ; 
P. R. i. 23, 32, 85, 88, 166, 
176, 230, 285, 329, ii. 85, 
260, 308, iii. 31, 84, iv. 90, 
500, 633 ; S. A. 335, 353, 
354, 420, 503, 1443, 1446, 
1460, I486, 14S8, 1517; Com. 
56, 876 ; Son. xvii. 14 ; 
Od.Nat.2;Ep.M.Win.24>; 



Vac. Ex. 59, 73, 91 ; Ep. JK 
Sh. 5-, Pf. lxxx. 71, cxiv. 1. 
the Son, Pf. ii. 25. 
begotten Son, P. L. v. 835, 
vii. 163. 

Son of God, P. L. iii. 138, 224, 
309, 316, 412, v.662, vi.799, 
x.33S;P.£.i. 11,122,135, 
173, 183, 335, 342, 346, 385, 
ii. 242,303,368,377, iii. 1, 
145, 252, iv. 109, 178, 190, 
iv. 196, 365, 420, 431, 451, 
484, 501, 513, 517, 518,539, 
550, 555, 580, 626, 636. 
Only Son, P. L. iii, 64, 79, 

403, v. 604, 718, 815. 
Only-begotten Son, P. L. iii. 
80. 

fong, P.L. i. 13, ii. 552, 556, iii. 
29,368,413, v. 7, 41, 178,204, 
619, vi. 167, vii. 12,30, 107, 
433, viii. 243, ix. 25, 800, x. 
648, 862; P. R. i. 12, 480, 
ii. 281, iv. 341, 505 ; S. A. 
1737 ; Lye. 36, 176 ; IlPenf 
56; Com. 44, S6, 235, 268, 
854 ; Son. xiii. 1 ; Od. Nat. 
133, 239; Od.Paff. 8; Od, 
Cir. 2 ; Od. Sol. Muf 6 ; Od, 
May-M. 9 ; Pf. lxxxi, 5. 

fongs, P.L. i. 441, iii. 148, iv. 
637,944,v.l6l,547,xi.594; 
P. R. iv. 336, 347 ; Lye. 123 ; 
Com. 878 ; Vac. Ex. 49 ; Pf 
lxxxvii. 26. 

fonorous, P. L. i. 540. 

fons, P. L. i. 353, 364, 406, 
495, 501, 654, 778, ii. 373, 
692, iii. 290, 463, 658, iv. 
213, 324, v. 160, 389, 447, 
716, 790, 863, vi. 46, 95, 
505, 715, vii. 626, viii. 637 f 
x. 819, xi. 80,84,319,348, 
410, 622, 696, 736, 75S, 875, 
xii. 145, 155, 357, 447, 448 ; 
P.R. i. 167, 237, ii. 192, iii. 
377, 406, iv. 197, 520,614; 
S. A. 240, 528, 12£4, 1485, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



1487, 1558, 1713 ; Com. 655 ; 
Od.Nat. 119; Od. D.F.I. 
47 ; Brut. 12 ; Pf. lxxxii. 12, 
Ixxxiii. 32. 
foon, P. L. i. 78, 127, 140, 278, 
337, 528, 56*8, 688, 705, ii. 
140, 376, 8l6, 839, 866,931, 
iii. 273, 355, 6*21, iv. 119, 
463, 464, 570, 822, 9*6, 995, 
v. 210, 667, 892, vi. 98, 344, 
432, 436, 528, 532, 547, 585, 
736, 777, 878, vii. 56, 59, 
129,418,420,viii. 214,256, 
336, 388, ix. 132, 182, 189, 
468, 470, 589,630, 880, 888, 
1053, 1100, 1143, x. 21, 52, 
160, 264, 331, 586, 596, 940, 
946, 1052, xi. 227, 238, 267, 
422, 441, 506, 596,66*3, 711, 
xii. 50, 420, 645 ; P. It. i. 25, 
262, ii. 37, 57, iii. 149, 244, 
iv. 375, 408, 459, 591 ; S. A. 

425, 764, IO96, 1155 ; L'Al. 
116 ; Com. 6*8, 577, 656, 690, 
717,727; &>«. vii. 9, xix.9; 
Od. Nat. 137 ; Od. Paf. 53 ; 
Od. Cir. 12 ; Od. Sol. ]\Iuf. 25 ; 
P/. iii, 11, lxxxi. 57. 

foon after, P. L. ii. 1023. 
foon as, P. L. ix. 1046. 

as foon, P. R. ii. 451 ; Com. 

1016. 
how foon, P. L. iv. 94, 95, 
vii. 93, xii. 553; Son. vii.l. 
fo foon, P.Pt. iv. 332; S.A. 

1585. 
too foon, P. R. i. 57; S. A. 
1566; Ep.M. Win. 8. 
fooncr, P. L. vi. 595, x. 613 ; 
P. R. i. 441, iii. 179; S. A. 

426, 1537; Com. 323. 

no fooner, P. L. iii. 344, 403, 
x.357, xi. 822; 5.^.20; 
Od. D.F.I. 1. 
fooneit, P. L. iv. 893, ix. 181 ; 

S. A. 1419. 
foot, P. L. x. 570. 
footy, P. £. v. 440; Com. 604. 



footh, P. L. ix. 1006 ; Od, D. 

F.I. 51; P/.V.26. 
footheft, Com. 823. 
foothing, P. P. iii. 6. 
footh-faying, CW. 8/4. 
Sophi, P. L. x. 433. 
forcerer, Com. 521, 940. 
forcereis, P. Z. ii. 724 ; S. A. 

819. 
forcerers, Od. Nat. 220. 
forceries, P. L. i. 479; S. A. 

937. 
forcery, P. L. ii. 566; Com. 

587. 
ford, P. i. xi. 433. 
fordid, Od. D. F. I. 63. 
fore, P. L. i. 298, vi. 328, 449, 

687, ix. 1124, x. 124; P. P. 

i.89,iv. 196, 402; 6*. -4. 287; 

Od. Cir. 13 ; Ep. M. Win. 47 ; 

Pf. vi. 6, lxxxi. 25, lxxxviii. 

30. 
Sorec, S.A. 229- 
fores, 5. ^. 184, 607. 
forrow, P. L. i. 6*5, 558, ii* 

578, 6*05, 797, viii. 333, x. 

193, 195, 201, 717, 1092, 

1 104, xi. 26*4, 301 , 362, 757 t 

xii. 613 ; S.A. 214, 1154, 

1339, 1347, 1564 ; Lye. 166; 

UAL 45 ; Com. 66*8 ; Od.PaJ. 

8 ; Od. Cir. 9 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 

37. 
forrow'd, S. A. l603. 
forrowing, P. L. xi. 117; Ep. 

31. Win. 53. 
forrows, P. L. xi. 90 ; P. P. ii, 

69, i v. 386 ; Od. Pajl 33, 55 ; 

Od, D. F. I. 73. 
forry, S. A. 1346" ; Com. 750. 
fort, P. L. iii. 129, iv. 128, 

582, vi. 376, ix. 8 16, xi. 574 ; 

P. R. iv. 198 ; S. A. 1323, 

1608. 
fort, (verb) P. L. viii. 384. 
forted, P. L. x. 65 L. 
for ting, P. P. i. 200. 
forts, P. X. vii, 541. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



fbttilh* P. L, i. 472. 

fought, P. L. i. 215, ii. 332, iii. 
601, iv. 799, 894, vi. 151, 
5295, viii. 457, ix. 75, 380, 
417,421, 511, 860, 878, x. 
336, 719, 752, 762, 1016, xi. 
148, xii. 278; P. R. ii. 19, 
77, 485, iii. 16, 342; S. A. 
193, 220,401, 658,793, 889; 
PA cxiv. 8. 

fought'ft, P. L. viii. 316. 

foul, P.£.ii. 556, iii.l68,248, 
iv. 487, v. 100, 171,486,610, 
816, vii. 388, 392, 528, viii. 
154, 585, 629, xi. 447, xii. 
584 ; P. R. ii. 90, 476, iv. 
313; S.A> 156,458; UAL 
138, 144; II Pen/. 40, 105 ; 
Com. 256, 383, 454, 467, 
784; Son. xi. 12, xiv. 2, 
x\x.4>;0d.Pqf. 41; Od. D. 
F.I. 21, 36; Od. on Time, 
19 ; £/?. M. Win. 71 ; Fac. 
Ex. 50; P/. vi.6, vii. 5,13, 
Ixxxiv. 5, lxxxvi. 5, 11, 12, 
46, lxxxviii. 10, 57* 
one foul, P. L. viii. 499, 604, 
ix. 967; Com. 561. 

fouls, P.L. v. 197, vi. 165, 837, 
xi. 724; So?i. xvi. 12; Od. 
Nat. 98. 

foul's, Com. 462. 

found, P. L. i. 531,711, 754, 
ii.288,4?6,515,880,iii.l47, 
iv. 453, v. 5, 872, vi. 64, 97, 
444, 749, 829, vii. 206, 558, 
viii. 243, 606, ix. 451, 518, 

557, 736, x. 508, 642, xi. 

558, xii. 229 ; P- R. i. 19, 
ii. 403, iv. 17, 247 ; S. A. 
176, 660; Lye. 35; Co?n, 
171,345,555,942; Od.Nat. 
53, 101, 193; Vac. Ex. 32; 
Pf. lxxxi. 10. 

found-board, P. L. i. 709- 
found, (adj.) P.L. ix. 407. 
found, (verb) P. L. v. 1/2, 
713, vi. 202, xi. 76; UAL 

VOL. I, 



94; It Pen/. 74; Od. Paf. 

26. 
founded, P. L. vi. 204. 
founded, P. i. viii. 253. 
founding, P. L. i. 668, ii. 517; 

Lye. 154. 
founds, P. L. i. 540, ii. 952, 

iv. 686, vii. 399, 597 ; Arc. 

78 ; Od. Sol. Muf. 3. 
founds, (the) Com. 115. 
founds, (verb) P. L. vii. 443, 
four, Com. r 109. 
fource, P.' L. iv. 750, x. 832, 

xi. 169, xii. 13 ; S. A. 64, 

664. 
fovran, P. L. i. 246, 753, ii. 

244, iii. 22, 145, iv. 691, v. 

256, 366, 656, vi. 56, vii. 79, 

viii. 239, 647, ix. 532, 6l2, 

795, 1130, x. 144, xi. 83 ; 

P. R. i. 84; Com. 41, 639; 

Od.Nat.60; Od.Pajf. 15. 
fovranty, P. L. ii 446, xii. 35. 
fouth, P. L. i. 354, iv. 782, x. 

655,686, 701, xi. 401, xii. 

139 ; P. it. iii. 273, 320, iv. 

69. 
fouthern, P. JR. iv. 28. 
fouthmoft, P. L. i. 408. 
fouthward, P. £. iv. 223. 
fouthweft, P. #. iv. 237. 
fouth-wind, P. i. xi. 738. 
fow, P. L. xii. 55 ; -Sow. xviii. 

10. 
fow'd, P. X. v. 2, vii. 358, ix. 

1095, 1112; Son. xx. 8. 
fown, P. £. xi. 27. 
fpace, P.L. i. 50, 650, ii. 717, 

vi. 104, vii. S9, 169, ix. 6*3, 

463, x. 320, xi. 498, xii. 

345 ; P. R. i. 169, ii. 339. 
fpaces, P. L. i. 725, viii. 20. 
fpacious, P. L. i. 689, 762, ii. 

974, iii. 430, v. 36/, 7 C 26, vi. 

474, 86l, viii. 102, x. 467, 

xi.556; P. R. iii. 254; S. A. 

1005. 
fpade, P. L. i, 676. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fpades, P. P. iii. 331. 
fpake, P. L.\. 125, 271, 663, 
ii. 50, 228, 309, 42.9, 704, 
735, iii. 79, 135, 143, 267, 
681, iv. 114, 393, 492, 781, 
844, 877, 977, v. 27, 246, 
599,616,672,694,743,849, 
896, vi. 56, 281, 450, 722, 
800, 824, vii. 138, 174, 339, 
518, viii. 39, 249,271,349, 
376, 434, ix. 318, 376, 494, 
552, 646, 1150, x.63, 182, 
1097, xi. 181,192,225,666, 
xii. 466, 624; P. R. i. 129, 
168, 256, 262, 294, 320, 465, 
ii. 147, 337, iii. 1,145,441, 
iv. 365; Son. xiv. 12; Od. 
Nat. 58. 

fpak'ft, P. L. viii. 444. 

i'pan, Son. xiii. 2. 

fpangled, P. L. xi. 130; Od. 
Nat. 21 ; Pf cxxxvi. 34. 

fpangling, P. L. vii. 384. 

fpare, (adj.) P. L. x. 511; J/. 
Pew/. 46 ; Com. 767. 

fpare, P. L. iii. 278, 393, v. 
320, vi. 460, x: 23; S. A. 
487 ; Son. viii. 10, xx. 13 ; 
Pf. iv. 5. 

fpar'd, P. L. ix. 596, 647; 
Xj/c. 113. 

fparely, Lye. 138. 

fpares, P. L. ii. 739. 

fpark,P. L. iv. 814. 

fparkle, ^rc. 27; Com. 80. 

fparkled, P. L. ii. 388. 

fparkles, P. L. vi. 766. 

iparkling, P. L. i. 194, iii. 507; 
S. A. 544. 

fparrow, Py* lxxxiv. 9. 

Spartan, P. L. x. 674 ; (W. -D. 
F. I. 26. 

fpafm, P. L. xi. 481. 

(pattering, P. L. x. 567. 

fpawn, P. L. vii. 388 ; Com* 
713. 

fpeak, P. I. i. 6l6, ii. 42, v. 
l60, vii. 16*4, viii. 100, 199, 



271, 380, 389, ix. 749,966' 

xii. 501 ; S. A. 731, 156*9; 

Com. 264, 357, 490, 492; 

Vac. Ex. 2 ; Eurip. 2 ; Pf. ii. 

10, iv. 20, v. 15, lxxxv. 29, 

33. 
fpeakable, P. L. ix. 563. 
fpeaking, P. L. ii. 705, viii. 3, 

222, ix. 1150. 
fpeaks, P. L. vi. 765 ; S. A. 

178; Cow?. 804; Pf. lxxxv. 

31. 
fpeak'fl, P. R. iv. 487. 
fpear, P. L. i. 292, 347, 436, 

565, ii. 204, iv. 785, 810, 

929, 990, vi. 195, x. 542, xi. 

248; 6'. A. 132, 284, 1121; 

Son. viii. 9; Od. Nat. 55. 
fpears, P. L.\. 547, ii. 536, iv. 

553,980, vi. 83; S.A.1619. 
fpear's, S. A. 348. 
fpecial, P. L. ii. 1033; S. A 

273, 636. 
fpecious, P. L. ii. 484, ix. 36l, 

xii. 354; P. P. ii. 391; S.A. 

230. 
fpeck'd, P. L. ix. 429- 
fpeckled, Od. Nat. 136. 
fpedacle, P.P. i. 415; S. A. 

1542, 1604. 
fpeclators, P. L. iv. 676, 
fpecular, P. R. iv. 236. 
fpeftres, P. P. iv. 430. 
fpeculation, P. X. xii. 589* 
fpeculations, P. £. ix. 602. 
fped, P. L. iii. 740; i^c. 122; 

P/^ lxxxiii. 41. 
fpeech, P. L. ii. 389, 989, iv. 

357, 409, v. 459, vii. 178, 

viii. 377, ix. 600,749,1133, 

xii. 5; P. P. ii. 300. 
fpeech es, Od. Nat. 37- 
fpecchlefs, P. L. ix. 894. 
fpeed, P. L. i. 674, ii. 700, 

iii. 643, iv. 13, 568, 788, 

928, v. 252, 313, 730, 

744, vi. 307, viii. 37, 38, 

110, x, 40, 90, 410, xii. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

2; P. R. ii. 116; S. A. fpie, Vac. Ex. 6l. 

1304, 13l6, 1343, 1345, fpied, P. X. iv. 403 ; Od. D. V. 

1728; Com. 573; So?i. xix. 1. If. 

12 ; Od. Nat. 79 ; Orf. D. F. fpies, P. X. ix. 815 ; 5. ^. 386, 

J. 6'0 ; Od. on Time, 3. 1 197* 

fpeed, (verb) P. X. ii. 1008, x. fpies, (verb) P. X. ix. 424. 

954 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 42. fpill'd, P. L. xi. 791* 

fpeeded, P. P. iii. 267. fpindle, Arc. 66. 

fpeed ier, P. X. xi. 7« fpinning, P. X. viii. 164; Cew?. 

fpeedieft, P. X. i ii. 229, vi. 715. 

534 ; S. A. 1263. fpires, P. X. i. 223, iii. 550, ix. 

fpeedily, P. X. v. 692. 502 ; P. P. iv. 54, 548. 

fpeeding, S.A. 1539- fpirit, P. X. i. 17, 139, 146, 

fpeeds, P. X. v. 267. 679, ii. 44, 956, iii. 389, 

fpeedy, P. X.i. 156, ii. 51 6, ix. 553, 630, 691, iv. 128, 531. 

260 ; S. A. 650, 1681. 565, 582, 793, 835, v. 221, 

fpell, P. P. iv. 385; II Pen/. 209,235,478,497,507,877, 

170; Com. 853, 874, 919; vi. 752, 848, vii. 165, 204, 

Od. Nat. 179 ; Vac. Ex. 89* viii. 440, 477, x. 784, xi. 6, 

fpeird, Son. xvii. 6. 406', 6ll, xii. 53, 303, 488, 

fpelling, Son. xi. 7. 497, 514, 519, 523, 525, 

fpells, S.^. 1132, 1139, 1149; 533; P.P. i. 8, 31, 189,215, 

Com. 154, 537, 646. 282, 358, 462, ii. 150, iji. 

fpend, P. X. ii. 144, x. 271, xii. 27, iv. 324, 495; S. A. 1238, 

22. 1435, 1675; Lye. 70; ll 

fpent, P. X. i. 176, ii. 248, iii. Pew/. 89, 151 ; Od. Paff. 38 ; 

417, v. 618, viii. 206, 457, Od. D. F. I. 38. 

ix. 145, 1187; P- P- iii- 232, fpirited, P. X. iii. 717, ix. 6.13. 

iv. 366, 443 ; S. A. 1758 ; Ep. fpiritlefs, P. X. vi. 852. 

Hobf. II. 29; P/. lxxxviii. fpiritous, P. X. v. 475, vi. 479- 

54. fpirits, P. X. i. 101, 318, 423. 

fpets, Com. 132. 609, 622, 658, 697, 789, ii. 

fpher'd, P. X. vii. 247. 482, 553, 687, 696, 825, 960. 

fphere, P. X. iii. 416, 482, iv. 1030, iii. 101, 136, 360,46l, 

39, 565,v. 169, 620, vii. 22, 654, 737, iv. 83, 36l, 786, 

355, viii. 82, x. 808 ; S. A. 805, 823, v. 374, 406', 439, 

172; Com. 241 ; Od. Nat. 48 ; 482, 484, 566, 837, vi. 167, 

Od. D. F. 1. 39. 333, 344, 596, 660, 788, vii. 

fphere-born, Od. Sol .Mvf 2. 189, 199, 610, viii. 466, 6l5, 

fphere-metal, Ep. Hobf. II. 5. 626, ix. 876, 1048, x. 890, 

fpheres, P. X. v. 477, vi. 315, xi. 124, 294, 420, 545, xii. 

viii. 131; Arc. 64; Com. 113; 596; P. R. ii. 122, 374; 

Od. Nat. 125 ; Vac. Ex. 40 ; S. A. 594, 613, 666, 1269 ; 

Brut. 2. Com. 3, 228, 674, 794, 812 : 

fphery, Com. 1021. Son. vii. 8 ; Od. SoL Muf. 

fpicy, P. X. ii. 640, iv. 162, 14; Vac. Ex. 22. 

v. 298, viii. 517; L'AL fpiritual, P. X. iv. 585, 677, v. 

100. 402, 406, 573, viii. 110, xii. 

r 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 

491, 518, 521 ; P. R. i. 10 ; fpous'd, P. L. v. 2I& 

Son. xvii. 10. fpout, P. L. ii. 176. 

fpit, P. P. ii. 343. fpouts out, P. L. vii. 416. 

fpite, P. L. i. 619, ii. 385, 393, fpray, P. P. iv. 437 ; 5<w?. 1. !'. 

ix. 178; P. P. iv. 12, 574; fpread, P. P. i. 354, ii. 407 r 

S. A. 1462. '88(3, 9^0, 1046, iv. 255, 454,, 

in fpite, L'AL. 44. v. 715, 880, vi. 241, 533, 

fpite, (verb) P. L. ii. 384, ix. 827, vii. 324, 434, ix. 1087,. 

147, 177. x. 446, xi. 343, 638 ; P. R. 

fpleen, Son. ix. 7- ii. 340, iv. 587; S. A. 1147,. 

fplendid, P.L. ii. 252. 1429; Pj/c 127 ; Com. 398;. 

fplendour, P. L. ii.. 447,, iii. Son. viii. 7; Od. Nat. l6'4;. 

572, iv. 870, v. 796 ; P. P. P/. lxxxviii. 40. 

i. 314, ii. 366 ; Arc. 92. ^reading,. P. L. x. 412, 1067 ;. 

fplendours, P. P. i, 610. P. P. iv. 148 ; Com. 1 84. 

ipoil, P. L. ii. 1009, iii. 251, fpreads, P. L. ii. 928, iv. 643,. 

xii. 172; P. P. ii. 401, iii. ix 1103; Lye. 55 , 81; PVP. 

75 ; S.A.I 191, 1203. 6 ; ^c. 14 ; CW. 620 ; Vac. 

fpoil'd, P. L. iii. 251, x. 186, Ex. 93. 

xi. 832 ; Ep. M. Win. 30. fpnng, P. P- ii. 28, iv. 268> 

fpoils, P. P. iv, 159, ix. 151, 274, v. 21,. 394, ix. 218, x. 

xi. 692 ; P. R. iv. 46. 6?S, 832, xi. 78; S. A. 1576; 

fpoke, P. L. x.5\7;S.A 727 ; L'Al. 18 ; Cow?,. 282, 985 ;. 

P/i lxxxvii. 10. .Sow. vii. 4; Od. Nat. 184; 

fpoken, P.. P. iii. 1.71 ; P.P. ii. Or/. P^ 52. 

90. fp ring-time, P. P. i.769. 

fponge, P. P. iv. 329. Spring, (verb) P. P. ii. 381, iii. 

fpontaneous, P. P. vii. 204. 334, v. 644, xi. 138, 425, xii. 

i'port, P. L. ii. 181, iii. 493; 113, 476; S. A. 584; Lye. 

S. A. 396, 1679 ; Lye. 68 ; l6. 

VAl. 31 ; Com. 128, 953, fprings, (fubrt.) P. P. iii. 435 ; 

fportful, P. X. iv. 396. P. P. ii. 374. 

fporting, P. 2,. iv. 343, vii. fprings,. (verb) P. L. ii. 1013,. 

405. *» 480, vii. 465, xii. 353 ; PJl 

fports, P. P. iv. 139; S.J. lxxxiv. 24. 

I6l4. fprinkle, Com. 911. 

fpot, P. L. iii. 588, 733, v. 1 19, fprinkled, P. P. iii.. 6 42. 

266, viii. 17, 23, ix. 439; fpVout, Jrc^.59. 

Com. 5; SW. xxii. 2, xxiii. 5. fpruce, Com. 985* 

fpotlefs, P. P. iv. 318. fprung, P.L. i. 331, ii. 758,. 

ipots, P. P. v. 419, vii. 479^ iii - 713, v. 98, vi. 312, vii., 

viii. 145. 58, 245, viii. 46, 259, i*. 

fpotted, Com. 444. 965, x. 591, xi. 22; Arc 

lpotty, P. L. i. 291 • 28 ; Com. 578, 923. 

fpoufal, P. L. viii. 519 ; S. y/. fprung up, P. P. x. 548. 

389. fpume, P. P. vi. 479. 

ipoufo, P. P. iv. 16'9, 742, v. fpun, Com. 83 ; Son. xx. 8. 

129, ix. 443. ipuu out, P. P. vii..241 e 



VERBAL INDEX. 

fpungy, 'Com. 155. 240, 4>71,?l6, 897, iii- 178, 

ipur, Li/c. 70. 622, 650, 654, iv. 64, 66 t 

fpurious, S. A. 391, 395, 518, 873, v. 522, 535, 

i'pum'd, S. A. 138. 540, 602, vi. 36, 234, 473, 

fpurns, P. X. ii. 929. 36*1, 565, 592, 801, 810, 

fpy, P. L. iv. 948, viii. 233. vii. 200, viii. 640, ix. 125, 

%, (verb) P. P. ii. 970, iv. 827, x. 1003, xii. 198, 

936, xi. 857. 265, 473, 527, 555 ; P. R. 

Spying, P. P. iv. 1005. i. 473, iii. 219, iv. 551, 

Squadron, P. P. i. 356, iv. 863, 554; 6'. A. 1431, l6l0; Cow?. 

977- 487^ Soru xi. 7, xix. 14; 

fquadron'd, P. L. xii, 367. Od Nat. 70; Otf. D. P. P. 

fquadrons, P. L, ii. 570, vi, 16, 6p; Vac. Ex. 81 ; P/. i. 12, 

251, 554, xi. 652 ; Od. Nat. v. 12, 

21. ftand fait, P. L. viii. 640. 

fquare, P. P. ii. 104S, v. 393, ftand (till, P. P. vi. 801, xii. 

x. 659 ; Corn. 329. 263. 

fquared, P. L. i, 758, viii. 232. ftandard, P. P. i. 5S3, ii. 9S6, 

iquat, P. £. iv. 800. v, 701, vii. 297. 

fquint, Com. 413. ftandards, P. L. v. 589. 

liable, P. ii. ii. 74; Orf, NaL ftandincr, P, P. vi. 243, 593, vii. 

243. 23, ix. 677* xi. 847 ; P. P. 

ftabled, P. X, xi. 752 ; Com. iii. 328. 

534. landing ftill, P. P. viii. 127. 

'ltablifh'd, P. P. xii. 347. Hands, P. P. i. 6l5, ii. 854, iv. 

(tack, UAL 51. 514, 983, vi. 4S9, x. 818; 

iiaff, P. P. i. 535 ; 5. A. 1123, P. P. ii. 220, 463, iv. 238, 

1303. 519 ;- S. A. 166, 726, 1558 ; 

(tag, P. P. vii. 469. -Lye. 131 ; Pf. lxxxii. 1. 

ftage, UAL \3\;Il Pew/ 102; liar, P, P. i. 745, ii, 1052, iii. 

Od. Pajl 2. 558, 727, iv, 556, v. 258, vii. 

(laid, P. P. iv. 421, 485; Com. 104, 133, 621, viii. 142, ix. 

832 ; Son. xiv. 6. 48, 1087, x. 426, IO69, xii. 

(lain, P.. L ii. 140, x. 639; 36*0 ; P.P. i. 249, 253, iv. 

£. ^. 325, 1166, 1386; II 6l9; Pj/c, 30; II Pen/. 171 ; 

Pe/?/. 26. . Cow. SO, 93, 341 ; Son. xxii. 

ftain'd, P. P. vi. 334, ix. 1076. 5 ; Od. Nat. 240 ; Od. P>. F, 

(tair, P. P. iii. 5l6, 540. J. 43. See Evening, Morn- 

ftahs, P. P. iii. 510, 523. ing, 

(takes, Cow, 491. ftar-bright, P. P. x. 450. 

(talk, P. L. v. 323, 337, 480, ftar-led, Od. Nat. 33. 

ix. 428 ; Com. 744. ftar-light, P. P. iv. 656; Cow, 

(talking, S. A. L245. 308. 

(talks, P. L. iv. 402. (tar-pav'd, P. P. iv. 976. 

(lall-reader, Son. xi. 5. ftar-proof, Arc. 89. 

(land, (fubft.) P. P. iv. 325, xi. ftar-ypointing, Ep. TV. Sh. 4. 

221. ftare, S. A. 112 ; Sow. xi. 11. 

ftand, P. P. i. 563, ii. 28, 55, itarlefs, P. P. iii. 425. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



ftarr'd, II Pen/. 19. 

Harry, P. L. i. 728, iii. 4l6, 
580, iv. 606, 64$, 724, 992, 
v. 281,620,709, vi. 827, vii. 
446, xi. 245 ; P. R. iv. 393 ; 
Com.i. 112; Od. Paf 18. 

flars, P.P. iii. 61,565,566,718, 
iv. 34, 355, v. 166, 176, 745, 
746, vi. 754, vii. 133, 348, 
357,358,364,383,578,581, 
620, viii. ip, 80, 123, 135, 
x. 412, xii. 422, 576; P. R. 
iv. 383; Com. 197,331,734, 
956 ; Od. Nat. 69 ; Od. on 
Time, 21; Pf. viii. 10. 

ftarted back, P. L. iv. 462, 463. 

ftarted up, P. P. iv. 81 9. 

flartle, UAL 42 ; Com. 210. 

ftartled, P. X. v. 26. 

Harts, P. X. iv. 813; P. JR. iv. 
449. 

ftarve, P. L. ii. 600. 

Harv'd, P. L. iv. 769. 

Hate, P. P. i. 29, 141, 640, ii. 
1, 24, 251, 279, 302, 511, 
585, iii. 186, iv. 38, 94, 400, 
519, 775, v. 234, 241, 288, 
353, 504, 536, 543, 830, vi. 
89, 900, vii. 440, viii. 176, 
239,290, 331, 403, 521, ix. 
123,337,347,915,948,958, 
1155, x. 19, 445, 619, xi. 71, 
180, 249, 363, 501, xii. 26, 
80; P. R. i.220, ii. 203, iii. 
189, 246, iv. 64, 601 ; S. A. 
164, 338, 424, 708, 892, 
1465, 1603, l6l 6; UAL 60; 
II Pen/, 37; Arc. 14, 81; 
Com. 35, 408, 475 ; Son. xix. 
11; Od. Sol. Muf. 24; Eurip, 
5 ; Pf. viii. 16, cxxxvi. 19. 

Hate-affairs, P. L. i. 775. 
in Hate, Com. 948. 

ftatelieft, P. L. iv. 142, ix. 435. 

itately, P. L. i. 614, 723, v. 
201, vii. 324, P. JR. ii. 350, 
iv. 48 ; S. A. 714 ; P/. Ixxxiii. 
48. 



Hates, P. L. ii. 387 ; Son. xvii. 

6; P/ lxxxii. 2. 
flation, P. P. iii. 587, vii. 146, 

563, x. 535, xii. 627 ; P. R. 

i. 360, iv. 584. 
Nations, P. L. ii. 412. 
ftatifts, P. R. iv. 354. 
flatue, Cow. 66*1. 
ftature, P. P. i. 222, 570, iv. 

988, vi. 302, vii. 509. 
flatues, P. R. iv. 37. 
flatute, Pf. lxxxi. 13. 
flatutes, Hor. I. 2. 
flay, P. P. iv. 898, viii. 46, ix. 

372,398, 856, x. 921; S.A. 

1536; iy.ii.28. 
flay, (verb) P. L. x. 253, xii. 

436,594, 6l6; P.P. ii. 326; 

S. A. 43, 1520; Arc. 26; 

Cow. 134, 577 ', 820; Od. ZX 

P. /. 63 ; Fee. £r. 25. 

at Hay, Pp. Hobf.U.6. 
flay'd, P. P. ii. 938, 1010, iii. 

571, 742, vi. 325, vii. 218, 

224, 589, ix. 1134. 
flays, P. L. iv. 470, ix. 268, 

xii. 73 ; Com. 892. 
Head, P. R. i. 473; S. A. 355; 

Com. 611. 
fleadiefl, P. L. xii. 377. 
Heady, P. P. v. 268.. 
Health, P. P. ii. 945, ix. 68; 

Com. 503. 
fleam, P. P. xi. 442 ; Com. 556. 
(teaming, P. L. v. 186. 
ftedfaft, P.P. i. 58, ii. 927, vi. 

833, viii. 129 ; H Pwf. 32 ; 

Od. Nat. 70. 
fleed, P. L. iv. 858, vfi, 17, xi. 

643. 
fleeds, P. P. i. 531, iii. 522, 

vi. 17, 391, ix. 35, xi. 7C6; 

Com. 553. 
Heel, P. L. ii. 569; P. R. iii. 

305, 328; 5. A. 133, 816; 

Co?w. 421. 
Hep, P. P. ii. 71,948, iii. 741, 

iv. 135, 172, 231, 680, vi. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



324, vii. 99, 299; P. R. iv. 

575; Lye. 52; Com. 97, 139; 

Od. Nat. 178; Pf vii. 6"0, 

lxxxi. 31. 
fleer, Son. xxii. 8. 
fteer'd, P. X. ii. 1020. 
fleering, P. X. x. 328 ; S. A. 

Ill ; Od.Nat. 146. 
fleers, P. X. i. 225, vii. 430, ix. 

515. 
fteerfman, P. X. ix. 513. 
fteerfmate, 6'. .4. 1045. 
ftellar, P. L. iv. 671. 
item, P. X. vii. 337- 
Hemming, P. X. 642. 
flench, P. X. i. 237. 
itep, P. X. iv. 22, 50, 52,6, ix. 

452, 834; S. A. 327; II 

Pen/. 38; Arc. 85; P/. v. 

24. 
ftep by flep, P.R.'i. 192. 

without itep, P. X. viii. 302. 
ftepdame, P. X. iv. 279 ; Com. 

830. 
fleps, P. X. i. 295, 296, 562, ii. 

828, iii. 501, 541, 644, v. 1, 

512, viii. 488, xi. 333, 354, 

xii. 648; P. P. iv.4>27;S.A. 

2, 1442; Com. 12, 92, 193. 
flept, P. X. iv. 820; Com. 185. 
item, P. X. iv. 877, 924, v. 

171, ix. 15, x. 866; P.P. 

iv. 367; Lye. 112; Cow. 

446; Od.Hor.l6. 
fternly, P. X. viii. 333 ; P. ii. 

i. 406. 
flicks, P. X. ix. 330 ; P. H. i. 

316. 
ftiff, P. X. vii. 441 ; P. JR. iv. 

418; Fore, of Con. 2. 
ftifling, P. L. xi.313-. 
Hill, (adj.) P. L. iv. 598, x. 

846; P. P. iii. l64; X3/C. 

3 87; II Pen/. 78, 127; -Sow. 

i. 2; Od. PaJ}\ 28 ; P/. lxxxiii. 

3, exxxvi. 49. 
ftill, (verb) Com. 87. 

(till, P. X. i. 68, 165, 256, 



641, 791, ii- 74, 295, 308, 
324, 385, 658, 1001, iii. 
301, 467, 618, 729, iv. 53, 
54, 56, 77, 91, 336, 356, 
511, 548, 572, 912, 930, 
v. 47, 184, 191, 205, 553 t 
vi. 172, vii. 30, 67, 379, viii. 
3, 61, 63, 140, 197, 252, 
355, 387, 444, 464, 587, 6*10, 
651, ix. 205, 206, 266, 326, 
353, 622, 973, 1138, 1154, 
x. 12, 120, 359, 376, 528, 
532, 594, 6*18, 684, 783, 806, 
830, xi. 352, 512, 632, 
xii. 106, 193,439,517,566; 
P. R. i. 33, ii. 242, 404, iii. 
92, 354, iv. 13, 121, 141, 
304, 523, 601 ; S. A. 77, 
807, 913, 1563, 1626; 11 
Penf. 41; Com. 560, 842; 
Son. vii. 10, xii. 10, xv. 10, 
xvi. 10, xxii. 8; Od. Nat. 59, 
100 ; Vac. Ex. 65 ; Pf. v. 32, 
38, lxxxi. 51, lxxxvi. 8. 

ftill'd, P. R. iv. 428. 

fling, P. L. ii. 653, iii. 253 ; 
S. A. 997, 1007. 

flings, P. X. xii. 432; S. A. 
623. 

flinks, Ariofi. 2. 

flint, Pf. viii. 7* 

ftir, P. L. v. 224 ; Com. 371. 

flir, (verb) P. X. ii. 214, iv. 19; 
Com. 5. 

flir up, Com. 677* 

ftirr'd, P. L viii. 308. 

flirr'd up, P. X. i. 35. 

ftirring up, P. X. xii. 288. 

ftirs> Com. 174. 

Stoa, P. P. iv. 253. 

flock, P. X. xii. 7, 325 ; S. A. 
1079; i J /. lxxxi. 35. 

ftocks, Sew. xviii. 4. 

Stoick, P. P. iv. 280; Com. 707. 

flole, (fubft.) // Penf. 35. 

flole, P. X. iv. 158, 719, xi. 
847; Arc. 31; Cow. 195, 
557. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

flolen, P. X. x. 20, xi. 125; Son. flop, (fubft.) P. L. vii. 596; 

vii. 2. Cow. ii. 552 

ftone, P. P. iii. 592, 59(5, 598, Hop, P. X. iii. 394, x. 291, xii. 

600. iv. 702, vi. 517, xi. 324, 166. 

445, 484, xii. 119; P. P. iv. flops, (fubft.) P. L. xi. 56l ; 

115, 149, 559 ; Cow. 449. Lye. 188; Cow. 345. 

ftones, P. P. xi. 658 ; P. P. i. ftopt, P. X. xi. 848. 

343 ; Son. xviii. 4; Pp. fF. (lore, P. L. iii. 444, iv. 255, v. 

Sh. 2. 128, 322, vi. 515, vii. 226, 

ftony, P. X. iii. 189, vi. 576, ix. 621, 1078 ; P. P. ii. 334; 

xi. 4; P. P. iv. 414; Arc. UAL 121; Cow. 774; Od. 

102; Cow. 8 19. P<7//: 44; P/. lxxxvii. 7, 

flood, P. P. i. 300, 357, 379, Ixxxviii. 9. 

380, 442, 492, 591, 6ll, 630, ftore-houfc, P. P. ii. 103. 

670, 723, ii. 305, 670, 707, flore, (verb) P. L. iv. 816; Cow. 

720, 884, 888, 918, 963, iii. 720. 

6l, 99, 101, 102, 217, 516, ftor'd, P. L. vi. 764, vii. 492, 

555, 711, iv. 59, 218, 326, viii. 152 ; S. A. 395. 

356, 455, 720, 779,787, 846, flores, P. P. ii. 175, v. 314; Pf. 

863, 926, 986, v. 54, 132, iv. 34. 

249, 285, 383, 568, 595, 631, ftoried, II Pen/. 159; Com. 5l6. 

vi. 62, 106, 111, 205, 302, ftories, UAL 101. 

306, 338,369,391,403,448, ftork, P. L. vii. 423. 

508, 526, 555, 579, 580, 581, ftorm, P. L. i. 172, vi. 546, ix. 

604,629,633,634,785,794, 433; P. R. iv. 436; S. A. 

882, 911, vii. 210, 563, viii. 106l. 

3, 261, 292, 464, ix. 277, ftorm, (verb) P. L. xii. 59; 

425, 463, 523, 593, 673, 890, 5. ^. 405 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 6. 

894, x. 211, 232, 352, 504, ftorming, P. L. vi. 207. 

535, 547, 712, xi. 1, 14, 71, ftorms, P. X. ii. 588, iii. 425. 

264,321,385,432,564,645, ftorms (verb) P. L.ii-922. 

743, 626 ; P. R. i. 169, 258, ftorm'ft, P. P. iv. 496. 

ii. 266, 298, iii. 1, 146, iv. 2, ftormy, P. L. x. 698; P. R. iv. 

33,561,571 ;S.^.135, l6ll, 418. 

1631, 1637, 1659; Cow. 297, ftory, P. L. vii. 51, viii. 265, 

565 ; Od. Paf. 39; Od. Sol. 522, ix. 886, xii. 506; P. P. 

JUV. 23 ; Ep. M. Win. 21 ; ii. 307, iv. 334 ; Lye. 95 ; // 

7-y;. Hobf. II. 19; P/: i. 3, P™/: 110; Son. xiiii 11; Ep. 

exxxvi. 49. iii. Win. 62 ; P/* iii. 8. 

flood under, P. P. viii. 454. ftoutly, UAL 52. 

flood up, P. L. ii. 44, v. 8O7. lloutnefs, S. A. 1346. 

ftood'ft, P. P. iv. 837, xi. 759; ftraight, P. L. i. 531, 723, ii. 

P. P. iii. 409, iv. 420. 959, iii- 647, iv. 405, 476, 

ftoop, P. L. iii. 73, 252 ; S. A. 741, 947, v. 287, vi. 6*13, vii. 

468 ; Com. 333, 1023. 453, viii. 257, ix. 632, x. 90, 

ftoop'd, P. L. viii. 351, xi. 185. 125, 36l, xii. 126; P. P. i. 

Hooping, P. P. viii. 465; .// 259, 275, iii. 256, iv. 581; 

Pen/i 72 ; 0d. P<z/7: 15. S. A. 385 ; I/;*/. 69 ; Cow, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



811, 835; Son. xii. 3; Vac. 

Ex.17; P/.lxxxv. 30. 
drain, Lye. 87; II Pen/. 174; 

Od. Nat. 17. 
drain'd, P. L. viii. 454 ; S. A. 

1348. 
draining, S. A. 164,6. 
drains, P. L. v. 148; UAL 

148 ; Com. 494, 56l. 
drait, (fubft.) P. L. x. 125. 
drait, (adj.) P. JL. ii. 948, iv. 

376, x. 8^8. 
draiten'd, P. L. i. 776, ix. 

323. 
draiter, Od. Nat. 169. 
draitening, P. L. vi. 70. 
draits, P. P. ii. 415; Pf. iv. 3. 
drand,P.£. i. 379;Od.D. F. 

J. 25. 
ftrands, Cow. 876. 
drange, P. L. i. 707, ii. 69, 

703, 737, 1024, iv. 287, v. 

116, 556, 855, vi. 91, 571, 

614, vii. 53, viii. 531, ix. 

599, 861, x. 479, 552, 799, 

xi. 733, xii. 60; P. R. ii. 

104, iv. 40; S. A. 1003; 

II Penf. 147 ; Corn. 628 ; Ep. 

Hobf. II. 32 ; Pf. lxxxi. 20. 
dranger, P. L. ii. 990, v. 3l6, 

397, xii. 358. 
drangled, Com. 729. 
dratagems, P. P. i. 180. 
draw, Lye. 124. 
draw-built, P. L. i. 773. 
dray, P. -L. vii. 405, xi. 176; 

UAL 72; Cow. 315; Vac, 

Ex. 53. 
ftray'd, P. L. iii. 476, viii. 

283 ; Lye. 97 ; Com. 503. 
drays, Cow. 895 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 54. 
dreak, P. X. iv. 623. 
dreaking, P. L. vii. 481. 
dreaks, P. L. xi. 679. 
dream, P. L. i. 202, 398, ii. 

580, 582, 607, iii. 7, 359, iv. 

336, v. 306, vi. 70, 332, 

vii. 67, xi, 569^ xii. 144, 



442; P. R. i. 72, 280, 
iii. 288, iv. 250; S. A. 546, 
1726; Lye. 55, 62; UAL 
130 ; 1/ Penf. 148 ; Cow. 19, 
97, 722, 825, 850. 

ftream, (verb) P. L. v. 590, 
vii. 306. 

dreamers, S. A. 7 IS. 

dreaming, P. L. i. 537» viii. 
467. 

dreams, P. L. i. 469, ii. 576, 
iii. 436, iv. 233, 263, v. 652, 
vii. 397, viii. 263 ; P. R. iv. 
277; Lye. 133, 174; Cow. 
884; Son. xiv. 14; Pf. i. 8, 
lxxxvii. 27, cxiv. 9. 

dreet, S. A. 204, 1458, 1599- 

dreets, P. L. i. 501, 503; S. A. 
343, 1402. 

drength, P. £. i. 116, 133, 
146, 154, 240, 427, 433, 572, 
641, 696, ii. 47, 200, 260, 
410, iv. 1006, vi. 116, 231, 
381,457,494,820,850,853, 
vii. 141, ix. 312, 484, 1062, 
x. 9, 243, 921, xi. 138, 539, 
xii. 389, 430; P. R. i. 161, 
ii. 276, iii. 402, iv. 9, 566; 
S. A. 36, 47, 53, 58, 63, 
127, 173, 206, 342, 349, 394, 
522, 536, 570, 586, 665, 706, 
780, 789, 799, 817, 938, 
1011,1136,1141,1212,1313, 
1355, 1360, 1363, 1439,1475, 
1494, 1496, 1502, 1503,1602, 
1644; UAL 112 ; Cow. 330, 
415, 416, 417, 418 ; Pf. viii. 
6 3 lxxx. 11, lxxxi. 1, lxxxiii. 
3, lxxxiv. 19, lxxxyi. 59, 
cxiv. 4. 

drength to drength, Pf. Ixxxir. 
25. 

drenuous, S. A.271- 

dretch'd, P. L. iv. 210, v. 754, 
vi. 80, vii. 414; UAL 111. 

dretch'd out, P. L. i. 209, viii. 
102, xi, 380 ; Lye. 190. 

dretching, P. L. ii. 1003. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



flrew, Lye. 151 ; Vac. Ex. 64. 
flrew'd, P. R. iv. 334; Cow. 

838. 
ftria, P. X. ii. 241, 412, iv. 

562, v. 528, vi. 869, ix. 903, 

ix. 13 1 , xii. 304 ; Com. 109. 
ftrifteft, P. X. ii. 321, iv. 783, 
x. 363; S. A. 319; Son. vii. 

2 0. 
flrictly, P. X. iii. 402, 405, ix. 

235 ; Lye. 66 ; Od. D. F. I. 

33. 
flride, S. A. 1067. 
ftrides, P. X. ii. 676, vi. 109; 

S.A. 1245. 
flrife, P. X. i. 623, ii. 31, 235, 

500, iii. 406, vi. 264, 289, 

290, 823, xii. 355; S. A. 

460 ; Ep.M. Win. 13; Vac. 

Ex. S5 ; Pf. lxxx. 25. 
ftrike, P. X. xi. 492; S. A. 

1645. 
firing, P. L. vii. 597 ; Lye. 17; 

II Pen/. 106; ^rc. 87; P/I 

lxxxi. 8. 
ftringed, Od. Nat. 97. 
firings, P. P. ii. 363. 
ftripes, P. X. ii. 334; P.R. iv. 

388. 
tripling, P. L. iii. 636; P. .R. 

ii. 352. 
ftripp'dft, S. A. 1188. 
ftrive, P. X. ii. 31, 899, iv. 275, 

859, x. 959 ; Com. 8 ; Vac. 

Ex. 78; P/: lxxxiii. 11. 
ftriv'fl, S.A. 841. 
flrode, P. X, ii. 676. 
flroke, P. X. i. 588, 702, 713, 

vi. 189, 317, x. 52, 210, 311, 

809, 855, xi. 268, 471, xii. 

189, 385; P.R. i. 59; II 

Pen/. 126; Od.Paff. 20. 
ftrong, P. X. ii. 434, 936, iv. 

786", vi. 336, viii. 241, 633, 

ix. 934, 1059, x. 265, 409, 

xi. 655, xii. 568; P. R. i. 

160, 290, iii. 168, 313, iv. 

92 ;S.^. 52, 556, 816,1134; 



Com. 212; Od. Cir. 27 ; Pf. 

lxxx. 64, 72, lxxxxiL 8, 

lxxxvi. 34. 
flrong-hold, P. X. vi. 228. 
ftronger, P. X. i. 92, ii. 83, vi. 

819, ix. 311, 491,492; Hor. 

III. 2. 
flrongefl, P. X. ii. 44; S.A. 

168, 553, 1155. 
ftrongly, P. X. i. 147, x. 202 ; 

Com. 8 06. 
flrook, Od.Nat.95. 
flrove, P. X. i. 721, v. 382; 

P. JR. iv. 564 ; II Penf. 19. 
ftrow, P.X. i.302. 
ftrow'd, P. X. xi. 439. 
ftrown, P. X. vi. 389. 
/trows, P. X. v. 348. 
ftruck, P. X. ii. 165, vi. 863; 

P.R. iii. 146, iv. 576; 5.^. 

1686. 
ftrucken, P. X. ix. 1064. 
ftrufture, P. X. i. 733, iii. 503, 

v. 761 ; P. Ii. iii. 286, iv.52; 

S.A. 1239. 
ftruclures, Com. 798. 
flruggle, P. X. ii. 606. 
ftruggling, P. X. vi. 659. 
flruts, L'Al. 52. 
Hubble, Cow. 599 ; P/ lxxxiii. 

52. 
ftubborn, P. X. ii. 569, xii. 193 ; 

P. ii. i. 226 ; Com. 434. 
ftubs, P. il. i. 339. 
ftuck, Ep. Hobf I. 4. 
ftudied, S. A. 658. 
fludies, Pf. i. 6. 
ftudious, P. X. viii. 40, ix. 42, 
xi. 609 ; P. P. iv. 243, 249 ; 
IlPevf. 156. 
fluds, P. P. iv. 120. 
fludy, P. X. i. J07, xi. 577. 
fludy, (verb) P. X. ix. 233. 
fluff, P. X. x. 601, xii. 43. 
flumble, P. X. iii. 201. 
flumbled, P. X. vi. 624. 
flung, P. P. i. 466. 
flunning, P. X. ii. 952* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fhipendioits, P. P. x. 351 ; 

S. A. 1627, 
ftupid, P. P. xii. 116. 
ftupidly, P. P. ix. 465. 
fturdieit, P. P. iv. 417- 
ftye, P. P. iv. 101; Com. 77- 
Stygian, P. P. i. 239, ii. 506, 

875, iii. 14, x. 453; UAL 3; 

Com. 132. 
ftyle, P. P. ii. 312, v. 146, vi. 

289, ix. 20, 1132; P.P. iv. 

359. 
ftyl'd, P. P. ix. 137, xi. 

695, xii. 33; Pf. lxxxvi. 

55. 
Styx, P. P. ii. 577- 
fubduding, P. P. viii. 536. 
fubdue, P. P. iii. 250, iv. 85, 

v. 741, vi. 40, 427, vii. 532, 

viii. 584, xi. 691, xii. 81 ; 

P.P. i. 218, 226, iii. 71, iv. 

252 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 69. 
fubdued, P. P. vi. 259; P. P. 

iv. 126; 5. A. 174, 1167. 
fubdues, P. P. ii. 198, vi. 458, 

xi. 132. 
fubdning, P. P. xi. 79%- 
fubjed, P. P. viii. 507, ix. 25 ; 

P. P. ii. 471 ; 5. A. 371, 

646,886, 1182; Sow. xi. 3 ; 

Vac. Ex. 30, 74. 
fubjeded, P. P. ix. 155, xii. 

640 ; S. A. 1205. 
fubjedion, P.P. ii. 239, iv. 50, 

308, vii. 345, 570, ix. 1128, 

x. 153, xii. 32; S.A. 1405. 
fubjeds, P. P. xii. 93. 
fublime, P. P. ii. 528, iii. 72, 

iv. 300, vi. 771, vii. 421, viii. 

455, x. 536, xi. 236 ; P. R. 

iv. 542 ; S. A. 1669 ; Com. 

785. 

more fublime, P. P. x. 1014. 
fublim'd, P. P. i. 135, v. 483. 
fublunar, P. P. iv. 777. 
fubmifs, P. P. v. 359, viii. 316, 

ix.377; P. P. i. 476* 



fubmiflion, P. L. i. 66l, iv. 81, 

96 t 310, xii. 597; S.A. 511. 
fubmiflive, P. P. iv. 498, x. 942. 
fubmit, P. P. i. 108, iv. 85, v. 

787, x. 196, 769> xi. 314, 

372,526; S.A. 751. 
fubmits, P. P. xii. 191 ; S. A. 

758. 
fubmitting, P. P. ix. 919. 
fubordinate, P. P. v. 671. 
fuborn'd, P. P. ix. 36l. 
fubfcribe, S.A. 1535. 
fubfcrib'd, P. P. xi. 182. 
fubfequent, S. A. 325. - 
fubferve, S. A. 57. 
fubfift, P. P. ix. 359, x. 922; 

P. P. iii. 19 ; Com. 686. 
fubftance, P. P. i. 117, 529, w- 

99, 356, 669, iv. 585, v. 420, 

474, 493, vi. 330, 657 t xi. 

775. 
fubftances, P. P. . 408, viii. 

109. 
fubftantial, P. P. iv. 189, 485. 
fubftantially, P. P. iii. 140. 
fubftitute, P. P. viii. 381. 
fubftitutes, P. P. x. 403. 
fubterranean, P. P. i. 231. 
fubtle, P. P. i. 727, ii. 815, iv. 

786, vi. 513, viii. 192, 399, 

ix. 184,307,324, x. 20; P. R. 

i. 465, ii. 323, iv. 308 ; Son. 

vii. 1. 
fubtleft, P. L. vii. 495, ix. 86, 

560. 
fubtleties, S. A. 56. 
fubtlety, P. P. ii. 358, ix. 93 ; 

P. P. i. 144. 
fubtly, P. P. viii. 207. 
fubvert, P. P. i. 124. 
fubverting, P. L. xii. 563. 
fuburb, P. P. i. 773. 
iuburbs, P. R. iii. 170. 
fuceeed, P. P. i. 666, iv. 535, 

x. 733, xii. 508. 
fucceeded, S. A. 908. 
fucceediug, P. R. ii. 143. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fuccefs, P. L. ii. 9, 123, iii. 
740, vi. i6l, 471, x. 239; 
P.R. i. 105, ii. 141, iii. 278, 
iv. 1, 23, 578; S.A. 1454; 
Son. i. 7. 

fuccefies, P. L. iv. 932, x. 396. 

fuecefsful, P. L. i. 120, x.463. 

fuccefsfully, P. R. i. 103. 

fuccefTion, P. L. xii. 331. 

fucceffivc, P. L. iv. 6l4. 

fucceffour, P. #. iii. 373 ; S. A. 
1021. 

Aiccinct, P. L. iii. 643. 

Succoth,* S. A. 278. 

fuccour, P. L. ix. 642 ; Pore. 
of Coji. 18. 

fuch, P. L. i. 70, 145, 230, 
237, 282, 317, 399, 523, 55 1, 
574, 620, 629, 718, 736, ii. 
73, 284, 290, 292, 713, 765, 
993, 1025, iii. 100, 107, 202, 
213,329,371,510,539,552, 
637, iv.42, 92, 118,163,364, 
372, 379, 526, 580, 705, 796, 
887, 996, v. 26, 31, 66, 81, 
114,149,233,362,372,373, 
472, 521, 530, 582, 650, 724, 
795, 825, vi. 13, 114, 168, 
193, 208, 229, 253, 300,310, 
333,342,395,401,488,591, 
623, 660, 688, 703, 788, 837, 
vii. 56, 118, 153, 181, 294, 
589, viii. 20, 27,31,36,48, 
50, 58, 88, 153, 232, 235, 
353, 390, 446, 482, 524,535, 
580, ix. 127, 145, 274, 282, 
292, 302, 39 1 , 408, 455, 520, 
566, 596, 620, 650, 693, 760, 
787, 86'7, 994, 995, 1024, 
1028, 1102, 1115, 1142, x. 
154, 267, 364, 4()1, 648, 899, 
1010, 1026, 1078, xi. 163, 
232,297,510,513,593,679, 
ti88, 890, xii. 31, 70,81, 200, 
230, 245, 284, 294, 335, 372, 
494,622; P.R. i. 209,299, 
307, 347, ii. 163, 226, 366, 



iii. 18,54, 337, 344, 361,412, 
iv. 129, 191, 350; S.A. 332, 
354, 678, 825, 857, 1001, 
1095,1108,1168,1276,1405, 
1441, 1643; Lye. IU;UAL 
29, 129, 138, 148; IlPaif. 
17, 26, 106, 145 ; Arc. 6s, 
94,108; Com. 15,173,179, 
186,227,262,263,291,308, 
470, 502,519,677, 703, 795, 
856, 962; So?i. viii. 6, xxiii. 
7; 0^1^.93,99,101,107, 
117, 157; Od. D.F.I. 40; 
Vac. Ex. 31, 33, 48 ; Ep. W. 
Sk.6, l5,l6;Ep.Hobf.I.5; 
Pf. lxxxv. 37. 

fuck, Lye. 140 ; Com. 980. 

fuck'd, P. L. x. 633. 

fucklings, Pf. viii. 5. 

fudden, P. L. i. 665, ii. 364, 
738, 890, iii. 542, iv. 818, v. 
452, 653, 891, vi. 582, vii. 
317, viii. 308, 354, ix. 963, 
xi. 293 ; P. R. i. 96, ii. 224 ; 
S. A. 953, 1691 ; Arc, 2 ; 
Com. 452, 552, 954. 
more fudden, P. L. vi. 279. 
on a fudden, P. L. ii. 752, 

879, v. 51, 632, ix. 900. 
fo fudden, P.L. iv. 821, x. 
453. 

fuddenly, P. L. v. 90, vi. 556, 
Viii. 292, 468, x. 341, xi. 183; 
P.P. ii. 298. 
too fuddenly, S.A. 1565. 

fue, P.L. i. 111. 

fues, S. A. 5/2. 

fuffer, P. L. i. 147, ii. 162, 
16'3, 195, 199, iii. 248, iv. 78, 
x. 213, 623; P. R. ii. 249, 
iii. 194, 195; S.A. 233; 
Com. 40, 809. 

futlerance, P. L. i. 211, 366, 
viii. 202; l\ R. i. 160. 

fufTer'd, P. L. vi. 701, x. 414, 
470 ; P.P. iii. 97, 101. 

fuffercrs, 6'. A. 1525. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



suffering, P. X. i. 158, ii. 340, 
xi. 375, xii. 398, 569; P. P* 
iii. 98, 192; S.A. 701. 

fufferings, P. X.iv. 26, xi.510; 
S. A.4>4>5', Od.Pafl.25. 

fuffers, P. P. i. 487 ; S.A. 458. 

fiiffer'ft, S. A. 744. 

Suffice, P. X. i. 148, ii.411, in. 
189, vii. 113, 114, viii. 620. 

fuffic'd, P. X. iv. 328, v. 451, 
xi. 88 ; P. PL ii. 276. 

fuffices, 5. ^: 63. 

Sufficient, P. X.ii. 102, 404, iii. 
99, vi. 427, vii. 147, viii. 5, 
ix.43, x.753,xi.252 ; P. P. 
iii. 247; 5.^. 1212. 

Sufficiently, P. X. viii. 404. 

fiiftVage, P. X. ii. 415. 

fuffufion, P^L. iii. 26*. 

fogged, P.P. i. 355. 

fuggefted, P. X. v. 702. 

fuggeftion, P. X. i. 685, iii. 129- 

fuggeilions, P. X. ix. 9O; S.A* 

599. 
fuing, S. A. 965. 
fuit, P.X. viii. 388. 
fuitable, P. X. iii. 639. 
fuitors, P. X. xi. 9- 
fuits, Xlor. I. 5. 
fullen, P. P. i. 500 ; II Pen/. 

76; Son. xx. 4; Od. Nat. 

205 ; Ftfc. £#. 95. 
fulphur, P. X. i. 69, 674, ii. 69. 
fulphurous, P. L. i. 171, vi. 

512, xi. 658. 
Sultan, P. X. i. 348, xi. 395. 
fultry, S.A. 1246; Lye 28. 
fum, P. L. vi. 673, viii. 522, 

xii. 338, 575; S.A. 1557, 
fum of all, P. R. i. 283. 
fumlefs, P. J/, viii. 36. 
fumm'd, P.X. vii, 421. 
fumm'd up, P. X. viii. 473, ix. 

113. 
fummer, P. X. ii. 309 ; P. Jl. 

iv. 246; UAL 130 ; Cow. 928, 

988. 
Summer's, P.L. iii. 43, vii. 478, 



ix. 447, x. 656 ; P. R. i\u 
222 ; Od. D. F. I. 3. 

fummers, Ep. M. Win. 7. 
fummon, P. X. ix. 374 ; P. R 9 

ii. 143. 
fummon'd, P. X. vi. 75, viii. 
347. 

fummoning, P. X. iii. 325. 

fummons, P. X. i. 757, 798, v» 
584, xi. 81; P. R. i. 40; 
Com. 888. 

fumptuous, P. R. iv. 1 14 ; S.A* 
1072. 

fums, P. X. i. 571, ix. 454. 

fun, P. X. i. 594, 744, 769, ii, 
492, iii. 8, 551, 572, 609, 
623,690, iv. 29, 37, 150, 244, 
352, 540, 591, 642, 651, v. 
139,171,175,187,300,370, 
423, 558, 746, vii. 247, 354, 
406, 582, viii. 94, 122, 133, 
l60, 161, 255, 273, 630, ix. 
48,60, 721, x. 92, 329, 529, 
651,663,671,682,688,1078, 
xi. 278, 844, xii. 263, 265 j 
P. R. iv. 432 ; S. A. 3, 86 ; 
Lye. 190 ; L'Al. 60 ; II Penf. 
131 ; Com. 30, 51, 98, 141, 
374,384,736; Son. xii. 7, 
xxii. 5 ; Od. Nat. 36, 79, 83, 
229; Pf. lxxxiv. 41, cxxxvL 
29. 

fun-beam, P. X. iv. 556. 

fun-beams, // Penf. 8. 

fun- bright, P. X. vi. 100. 

fun-clad, Corn. 782. 

fun-light, P. X. ix. 1087. 

fun-rife, S.A. 1597. 

fan-mine, P. X. iii. 616 ; UAL 
98 ; Com. 959- 

fung, P. X. iii. IS, 372, iv. 603, 
71 1 , v. 148, 405, vi. 526, 886. 
vii. 182,259, 275, 56o t 573, 
601, 633, viii. 519, x. 642, 
643, xi. 583, xii. 367; P.P. 
i. 1, 172, 243, iii. 178, iv. 
258, 506, 637 ; S. A. «K)3, 
983; II Po>r 117; 4rc29i 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Com. 256 ; Son. i. 11; Od. 

Nat. 119; Od. Or. 4; Od. 

Sol.Muf.T- 
funk, P. L. i. 436, ii. 81, 182, 

594, viii. 593, ix. 48, 74, xi. 

758 ; P. P. iv. 398 ; Lye. 

102, 167, 172; Cow. 373; 

Od. Pajf. 40. 
funk down, P.JL.v.91, vii. 289, 

viii. 457, xi. 420. 
funny, P. L. iii. 28, 625, viii. 

262; P.R. iv. 447. 
funs, P. L. iii. 589, iv. 578, 

673,792, v.273, vii. 361, viii. 

139, x. 670 ; Son. viii. 8; 

Od. Nat. 19. 
funs, P. L. vi. 305, viii. 148. 
fuperficially, P. L. vi. 476. 
fupcrfluous, P. L. iv. 832, v. 

325, viii. 27, ix. 308; So?i. 

xxi. 13. 
fuperiour, P. L. i. 283, iii. 737, 

iv. 499, v. 360, 705, 905, vi. 

443, viii. 532, ix. 825, 1131, 

x. 147, xi. 636 ; P. JR. iv. 

167,324; Com. 801. 
fupernal, P. L. i. 241, vii. 573, 

xi. 359- 
fupernumerary, P. L. x. 887. 
fuperfcription, 5. ^4. 190 ; Ep. 

Hobf. II. 34. 
fuperilition, P. £. iii. 452; 

S. A. 15. 
fuperftitions, P. X. xii. 512. 
fuperftitious, P. P. ii. 296. 
fupper, P. L. iv. 331, ix. 225 ; 

P. ii. ii. 273 ; Com. 293, 541. 
fupplanted, P. L. x. 513 ; P.R. 

iv. 607. 
fupple, P. L. v, 788, viii. 269. 
fuppliant, P. L. i.H2,x.917; 

S.A. 1173. 
fupplication, P. L. v. 867, xi. 

31; S.A. 1459; P/. vi. 19, 

lxxxvi. 17. 
fupplied, S. A. 926. 
fupplies, Pf. exxxvi. 86. 
fupply, (fubft.) P. L. xi. 7*0. 



fupply, P. i. ii. 834, x. 1001, 

3078. 
fupport, P. L. i. 23, 147, 295, 
ix. 427, x. 834; P.R. ii. 
250; S.A. 1274, 1634. 
fupported, P. L. xii. 496. 
fupports, Son. xxii. 9. 
fuppofe, P. i. ii. 237, vi. 6l7; 

S. A. 334 ; Com. 307, ±77. 
fuppos'd, P. L. i. 451, iv. 130, 

281, viii. 134, ix. 297, x. 

809. 
fuppofes, P. R. iii. 355. 
fuppofefl, P. L. viii. 86. 
fuppofmg, 6'. A. 1443 ; Cow. 

576. 
fupprefs'd, P. L. vii. 123. 
fupremacy, P. L. i. 132, iii. 

205. 
fupreme, P. X. i. 248, 735, ii. 

210, 236, 510, iii. 319, 659, 

iv. 91, 956, v. 670, vi. 27, 

723, 114, vii. 142, 515, viii. 

414, ix, 125, x. 28, 70, 480, 

xi. 82; P.R. i. 99, iv. 186 ; 

Od. on Time, 17. 
Supreme Good, Com. 217. 
fups, P. L. v. 426. 
fupt, Ep.H&bf. I. 18. 
iurburban, P. R. iv. 243. 
furceafe, Pf. lxxxv. 35. 
furceas'd, P. L. vi. 258 ; S. A. 

404. 
furcharg'd, P. L. ii. 836, v. 58, 

xii. 373; S.A, 728, 769; 

Com. 728; P/. lxxxviii. 10. 
fure, P. L. ii. 32, 154, 169, v. 

168, vii. 267, 586, ix. 756, 

xi. 772; P.P. iii. 363, iv. 

483; S. ^.424, 465, 1385, 

1408; Co?n. 148, 246, 310, 

493 ; Son. ix. 1 1 ; Od. Patf. 

48; Ep. Hobf. II. 18; P/. 

exxxvi. 4, 96. 

be fure, P. L. i. 158, ii. 323, 
iii. 478, iv. 841, v. 721, vi. 
647, ix. 1080, xii. 485. 
furely, P. L. iv. 923 ; Od. Nat. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



£0; Od. D.F.L 36; Ep. 

Hobf.1.9; Pf> lxxxv. 37. 
furer, P.L. ii. 39, xi. 856. 
fureft, P. L. i. 278, iv. 407. 
furety, P. L. v. 538. 
furface, P.L. vi. 472 ; Od. Nat. 

162. 
furfeit, P. L. v. 639, vii. 129, 

xi. 795; S. A. 1562; Com. 

480. 
furge, P. L. i. 173, x. 417. 
furging, P. L. ii. 928, vii. 214, 

ix. 499; -?•#• iv. 18. 
furmife, P.L. ix. 333 , Xj/c. 

153. 
furmife, (verb) P. L. xi. 340. 
furmounts, P. L. v. 571 ; S. A. 

1380. 
furnam'd, P. 2?. ii. 199, iv. 279- 
furpafs, P. L. i. 778, ii. 370, 

xi. 894. 
furpafs'd, P. L. ix. 389- 
furpaffeft, P. L. viii. 359- 
furpaffing, P. L. iv. 32, vii. 640 ; 

S. A. 1313. 
furprifal, P. L. v. 245 ; Com. 

6*18. 
furprife, P. L. ii. 134, vi. 87- 
furprife, (verb) P. L. vii. 547, 

xi. 218, xii. 453. 
furpris'd, P. L. ii. 753, iv. 814, 

vi. 393, 39^ 77±, ix. 354 ; 

P. R. i. 108, 155; S. A. 381, 

1285 ; Com. 590. 
furrender, P. L. iv. 494. 
furround, P. L. ii. 796 ; Pf. v. 

39, vii. 26. 
furrounding, P.L. i. 346; Com. 

403. 
furrounds, P. L. iii. 46 ; Od. 

Nat. 109. 
furvey, P. L. viii. 24; 5. ^. 

1089, 1227, 1230. 
furvey'd, P. L. i. 456, iii. 69, 

viii. 268 ; P. it. i. 37. 
furvey ing, P. L. vii. 353. 
furveys, P. L. iii. 555, vi. 476. 
furvives, S. A, 1706, 



Sus, P. L. xi. 403. 

Sufa, P. L. x. 308 ; P. it. iii, 

288. 
Sufiana, P. it. iii. 321. 
fufpect, P.L. ix. 337, x. 140; 

P. R. ii. 399 ; S. A. 272 ; 

Fac. E t r. 27- 
fufpeded, P. L. xii. l65 ; P. K. 

i. 124. 
fufpend, P. L. vi. 692. 
fufpended, P. L. ii. 554. 
fufpenfe, P. L. ii. 418, vi. 580, 

vii. 99; S.A. 1569. 
fufpicion, P. L. iii. 686, ix. 

1124; Com. 413. 
fufpicious, P. L. iv. 51 6, ix. 

92; P.R. ii. 82, iv. 96; 

Com. 158. 
fuftain, (fubft.) Pf. iii. 14. 
fuftain, P. L. ii. 209, viii. 535 7 

ix. 978, x. 950, 1056, xii. 75 ; 

P. R. iii. 19; 5. ^. 1258. 
fuiiain'd, P. L. v. 415, 904, vi. 

423, ix. 336, x. 1083. 
fuftenance, P. it. i. 429. 
fwaddling, Od. Nat. 228. 
fwage, P. L. i. 556; S. A. 184. 
fwain, P. P. i. 337; Lye 92, 

113, 186; Com. 84,497,634, 

852, 900 ; Ep. M. Win. 38. 
f wains, Arc. 26; Com. 951. 
fwallovv, Pf. lxxxiv. 11. 
fwallow'd up, P. L. i. 142, ii. 

149, ix. 642 ; Od. Pqf 7* 
fwallows, P. L. xii. 196. 
fwan, P. L. vii. 43S. 
fwarm, P. L. vii. 400 ; P. it. iv. 

15; S.A. 19. 
fwarm, (verb) P. L. ii. 903 ; 

,S. A. 192. 
fwarm'd, P. L. i. 676, 776, x. 

526. 
fwarming, P. L. vii. 489, x. 522- 
fwarming down, P. L. xii. 185. 
fwart, Co???. 436. 
fwart-flar, Luc. 138. 
fway, P. L. ii. 984, iv. 308, vi. 

234,251, ix. 113i; P. it. iii. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



60, 405 ; 5'. A. 791 ; Corn. 
18; Od.Nat. 170. 

fway, (verb) P.L. viii. 635, x. 
376, xi. 405; Son. xviii. 
11. 

fway'd, P. L. x. 1010 ; S. A. 
10591 Od. Sol. Muf. 22; Pf. 
ii. 18. 

fways, P. L. iv. 983 ; Com. 825. 

fweat, P. L. viii. 255, x. 205,. 
xi. 172; Od.Nat. 195. 

fweaty, P. L. xi. 434. 

Swede, Son. xxi. 8. 

iweep, Lye. 17. 

fweeping, II Pen/. 98. 

fweet, P. L. i. 712, ii. 492, 608, 
820, iii. 42, 346, 367, iv. 272, 
298, 311, 328, 439, 641, 646, 
656, v. 25, 59, 134,170,212, 
296, 346, 630, 637, vii. 319, 
375, 596, viii. 184, 214, 603, 
ix. 115, 171,238, 250, 272, 
32 1 , 407, 408, 456, 46l , 473, 
899, 909, 986, x. 228, 359, 
994, xi. 281, 303, xii. 5; 
P.P. ii. 160, 265, iv. 16,242, 
438 ; S. A. 10, 1737 ; Lye. 
179; UAL 36; IlPenf.6l, 
151 ; Arc. 68 ; Co?n. 47, 230, 
241,261,368,376,567,850, 
878, 1005 ; Od. Nat. 23, 93 ; 
Od. D. F. I. 71 ; Ep.M. Win. 
15, 50 ; Vac. Ex. 52; Arioft. 
2; P/.lxxxv. 43. 
more fweet, P. L. ii. 555, v. 
68, xii. 221. 

fweet-briar, UAL 47. 

fweeten'd, Com. 495. 

fweet-fm'elling, P. L. iv. 709, 
xi. 327- 

fwcet-fmiling, Od. D. F. L 53. 

fweeter, P. L. viii. 211. 

fweeteft, P. L. v. 41, ix. 200, 
581, x. 609; UAL 133"; II 
Pen/. 57 ; Com. 230. 

fwcetly, Com. 249 J Od. Cir. 4 ; 
Pari Ex. 63. 

fwectnefs, P. L. v. 152, viii. 



216,47 5 ;UAl.l40;IlPatf. 

164 ; Son. xxiii. 11. 
fweets, P. L. iv. 166, 760, v. 

294 ; Com. 123, 479. 
fwell, P. P. iii. 81 ; Com. 732 s 

iy. lxxxiii. 12. 
fwelling, P. L. iv. 495 ; vii. 

321; P. P. iv. 343. 
fwerve, P. L. v. 238, 902, xi, 

359 ; Pf. lxxxi. 16. 
fwerv'd, P. L. vi. 386. 
fwet, UAL 105. 
fwift, P. L. i. 326, ii. 529, 631, 

902, iii. 582, 652, 714, iv. 

556, 593, v. 907, vi. 190, 192, 

320, 326, 596, vii. 295, 469, 

viii. 21, 133, ix. 633, x. 224, 

xi. 127; P. P. ii. 385; Lye. 

63; Com. 80, 114,579,855; 

Vac. Ex. 96. 
fwift-rufliing, Od. D. F. I. 67. 

more fwift, P. L. vii. 176. 
fwifter, P.L. ii. 791. 
fwifteft, P. L. vi. 535, x. gu 
fwiftly, P.L. ix. 631 ; Vac. Ex. 

28. 
fwiftnefs, P. L. viii. 38, 107. 
fwill'd, Com. 178. 
fwim, P. L. i. 202, ix. L009, 

xi. 625, 626. 
fwims, P. L. ii. 950, vii. 414. 
fwindges, Od. Nat. 172. 
fwine, P. R. iv. 630; Cow. 53. 
fwing, S. A. 1240. 
fwinifh, Com. 776. 
fwink'd, Com. 293. 
fwollen, P. P. iv. 499 ; S. A. 

532 : Lye. 126. 
fwooning, Ep. Hobf. II. 17. 
fwoonings, 6'. >4. 631. 
fword, P. L. ii. 294, vi. 250, 

278,320, 324, 329,714, xi. 

120, 247, xii, 592,633; P. R. 

ii.9l;S.A. 143,692,1165; 

Com. 601 ; Son. xvii. 12 ; Pf. 

vii. 46. 
fworded, Od. Nat. 113. 
f word-law, P. L. xi, 672. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lVvord-players, S. A. 1323. 
fwords, P.L. i. 664, vi. 304. 
fwore, P. L. iv. $6. 
fworn, P.L. i. 322, v. 607,814, 

xii. 346; Cow. 1011. 
fwura, P. L. ii. 753, vii. 503, 

xi. 745, 753. 
Syene, P. L. iv. 70. 
fyllable, Coin. 208. 
Sylvan, P. L. iv. 140, v. 377; 

P.P. i. 480,ii. 191; 1/ Pew/*. 

134; Co???. 26"S. 
Sylvanus, P. L. iv. 707. 
Sylvefter, Ariqft. 4. 
fympathize, Cor?*. 796 ; Od. JVaf. 

34. 
fympathy, P. L. iv. 465, x. 246, 

540. 
fymphonies, P. L. i. 712, v. 

162, xi. 595. 
fymphonious, P. L. vii. 559- 
iymphony, P. L. iii. 368 ; Od. 

Nat. 132. 
fynod, P. L ii. 391, vi. 156, x. 

661, xi. 67. 
Syrens', Arc. 63. 
Svrens, Com. 253, 878; Od. 

"Sol.Muf. 1. 
Syrian, P. L. i. 421, 448, 474, 

xi. 21S ; Ep.M. Win. 63. 
Syrinx, P. P. ii. 188 ; Arc. 106, 

107. 
fyrops, Co??». 674. 
Syrtis, P. L. ii. 939- 



tabernacle, P. L. vii. 248, xii. 

247 ; P. P. iv. 599- 
tabernacles, P. L. v. 654 ; P/I 

lxxxiv. 3. 
table, P. L. v. 391, 392, 443 ; 

P. P. ii. 340, 3S4, 402, iv. 

588. 
tables, P. L. v. 632 ; P. R, iv. 

115. 
tacit, 5. ^. 430. 



tackle, P. L. ii. 1044; S. ^. 

717. 
ta'en, Com. 541 ; £/>. #06/ I. 

13. 
tail, P. L. x. 523 ; 5. ^. 360. 
taint, P. L. iv. 804, v. 704, x. 

6*31, xii. 512; S. A. 312; 

Son. xxiii. 5. 
taint-worm, L3/C. 46. 
tainted, P. L. xi. 52. 
take, P. L. xi. 100 ; P. P. iii. 

140; 5.^.928, 1570; Com. 

84, 321. 
take heed, P. L. viii. 635. 
take root, P. L. ix. 1105, xi. 

834. 
take up, Od. Pajf. 51. 
taken, P. L. x. 207, xi. 98, 

262; P. P. ii. 177. 
takes, P. L. iv. 622 ; P. P. ii. 

236, 241 ; Vac. Ex. 20 ; Pj. 

v. 9, lxxiii. 53. 
tale, L'^/. 67 ; i7 Pen/. 100 ; 

Co???. 44. 
tales, L'Al. 115. 
talent, iSo/z. xix. 3. 
talk, P. L. v. 115, ix. 1, 237; 

P.P. iii. 55, iv. 171, 307; 

S. A. 1S8 ; Cow?. 464. 
talk, (verb) P. L. iv. 744, 970; 

P. P. i. 485, iv. 313. 
talk'd, P. L. iii. 483, ix. 613, 

xi. 322, 444; P. P. ii. 6; 

iv. 484. 
talking, P. L. i. 192, iv. 6S9; 

Pf.iv.27. 
tall, P. L. i. 534, iv. 2SS, 477, 

xi. 728 ; Arc. 46; Pf. lxxx. 

43. 
talleft, P. L. i. 292 ; P. P. iv. 

416. 
talons, P. P. ii. 403. 
tame, P. L. vi. 686; P. P. ii. 

163; S.A.538, 1695. 
tam'd, P. L. xii. 191 ; #• A. 

1093 ; Co?«. 443. 
tamely, P. L. ii. 1028. 
tames", P. P. ii< 406. 



VOL. I. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tangled, P. it. ii. 162; S. A. 
1665; Com. 181; Od. Nat. 
188. 

tangles, P. L. ix. 632 ; Lye. 69. 

tangling, P. X. iv. 176. 

tann'd, UAL 90. 

Tantalus, P. P. ii. 6l4. 

taper, UAL 126; Cow. 337. 

tapers', Od. Nat. 202. 

tapeftry, Com. 324. 

Taprobane, P. P. iv. 75. 

tardy, P. P. x. 853. 

targe, P. P. ix. 1111. 

Tarpeian, P. P. iv. 49. 

Tarfus, P. P. i. 200; 6*. ,4. 715. 

Tartar, P. P. iii. 432, x. 431 ; 
II Pen/. 1 1 5. 

Tartarean, P. L. ii. 69. 

tartareous, P. P. vii. 238. 

Tartarus, P. L. ii. 858, vi. 54. 

talk, P. P. i. 159, ii. 246, iv. 
437, v. 564, 854, ix. 13, 207, 
221 ; P. P. i. 427, iii- 36S ; 
S. A. 5, 35 ; Com. IS, 1012 ; 
Son. xv. 9, xxii. 11; Vac. 
Ex. 8. 

tafk-mafter's, Son. vii. 14. 

taffell'd, ^rc 57- 

tafie, (fubft.)P.P. i. 2, ii.613, 
j\. 2 1 7, 25 1 , 369, v. 304, 336,. 
viii. 527, ix. 747, 777, 786, 
931,986, 1017, x. 563, 566, 
xi. 85, 541, 618; P. R. ii. 
731; S. A. 54,5; Com. 714; 
£W. xx. 10. 

tafte, P. P. ii. 686, iii. 199, iv. 
217, 25 1, 36'9, 423 ,427,51 5 , 
527, v. 59, 61, 77, 86, 369, 
397, 411, 432, 464, vii. 539, 
viii. 3^7, 401, ix. 476, 651, 
732,742,753, 866, 881,925, 
931, 988, x. 4, 13,26*8; S.A. 
1091 ; Com. 66, 67, 702, 
813. 

rafted, P. P. v. 65, vii. 543, ix. 
688,770, 788, 86*4, 86'7, 874, 
x. 687; P-R- i. 308, ii. 131, 
247 ; CW. 52. 



taftes, P. P. v. 335, vii. 49;- 

P. P. iv. 347. 
tafting, P. P. v. 412, ix. 585 r 

883, 935, 972, 1024. 
taught, P. P. i. 8, 685, iii. 19, 

iv. 915, v. 204, 508,698,826,. 

viii. 182, 190, ix. 748, 1068, 

x. 66l, 861, xi. 531, 612, 

735, xii.572; P.P. ii. 269, 

295, iii. 97, iv. 220, 261, 3*57, 

36l ; S. A. 872; Com. 515; 

Son. xiii. 2, xxi. 3 ; Fore, of 

Con. 8 ; Pf. ii. 23. 
taught'ft, Son. xi. 14. 
Taurick, P. P. iv. 79* 
Tauris, P. P. x. 436. 
Taurus, P. P. i. 769, x. 673. 
tawny, P. P. vii. 404; P/. 

exxxvi. 54. 
tax, £'..4.210. 
teach, P. L. v. 786, 865, x. 

1062, xi. 836, xii. 440, 446 ;. 

P. R. i. 224, 461, iv. 309;. 

II Pen/. 80 ; Com. 1020 ; Hor, 

II. 1; Py.lxxxvi.37. 
teacher, P. P. xi. 450. 
teachers, P. P. xii. 508 ; PR, 

i. 213, iv. 262; Hor.ll. I. 
teaching, P. P. iv. 220 ; P. P, 

iv. 357. 
team, 0</. JW. 19. 
tear, P. P. v. 130; S.A. 200, 

953; Lye. 15; Otf. CVr. 7 ; 

Pf. vii. 5. 
tearing, P/i vii. 6. 
tears, P. P. i. 393, 620, ix. 

1121, x. 910, 1089, 1101, 

xi. 119,497, 627, 674, 755, 

xii. 373,645; S.A. 51, 128, 

729, 735, 1459, 1721 ; Lye. 

150, 181; II Pat f. 107; Od. 

Pafi 35, 48 ; Pp. M. Win. 

44,55; Pf. vi. 13, lxxx. 2K 

22, 23. 
teafe, Com. 751. 
teats, P. P. ix. 581. 
tedded, P. P. ix. 450. 
tedious, P. P. v. 354, viii. 3Sp, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

ix. 30, 880 ; P. R. iv. 123, tempeft, (verb) P. L. vii. 412, 

307 ; Od Nat. 239. tempeftuous, P. L. i. 77 1 vi, 

teem'd, P. L. vii. 454 ; S. A. 844, x. 664. 

1703. temple, P. L. 402, 443, 460, 

teeming, Com.175. 463,492,713, v. 274, vi. 890, 

teeth, P/i iii. 23. vii. 148, xii. 334, 340, 356 ; 

Telafiar, P. L. iv. 214. • P. P. i. 211, 256, iii. 83, l6l, 

telefcope, P. P. iv. 42a iv. 217, 546; S. A. 1146, 

tell, P. L. i. 205, 507, 693, ii. 1370; Com. 46l ; Son. viii. 

739, iii. 8, 54, 575, 667, iv. 11; Pf. v. 20, lxxxiv. 37, 

37 9 236, v. 160, 238, 685, vii. lxxxvii. 4. 

101, viii. 250, 276, 277, 280, temple of God, P. L. i. 402. 

ix. 569, x. 469, xii. 26l ; temples, P. L. i. 18, 494, xii. 

P. R. i. 14, ii. 215, 320, iii. 527; P. P. i. 449, in. 268, 

339, iv. 113, 120, 153, 467; iv. 34; S.A. 990, 1378; Od, 

S.A. 1199, 1319,1557; Com. Nat. 198 ; Brut. 6. 

236, 240, 458, 509, 513 ; Od. temporal, P. L. xii. 433. 

D.F.I. 51 ; Brut. 3 ; P/I tempt, P. X. ii. 404, 1032, v. 

lxxxviii. 45, cxxxvi. 9. 468, ix. 281, 736 ; P. R. i. 

tell-tale, Cow?. 141. 143, 178, iv. 431, 56l, 580, 

telling, P. L.xi. 299 \Com. 628. 611; 5. A. 358. 

tells, P. L. iv. 793, v. 698, temptation, P. L. viii. 643, ix. 

702, xii. 364; P.P. ii. 307 ; 299, 364, 531; P. R. i. 5, 

L'^/. 105. 123, ii. 405, iv. 533, 595, 

tell'ft, P. L. iv. 588, v. 553. 60S, 6 17 ; 5. A. 427, 1051. 

Temir's, P. L. xi. 389. temptations, P. L. iv. 65, vi. 

temper, P. L. i. 285, 552, ii. 908 ; Od. Pajf. 24. 

218, 276, 277, iv. 812, x. tempted, P. L.i. 642; ix. 297; 

1047 ; P. R. ii. 164. S. A. 801. 

temper, (verb) P. L. iv. 670, tempter, P. L. iv. 10, ix. 549, 

x. 77, xi. 36l. 567, 655, 665, 678, x. 39, 

temperance, P. L. vii. 127, xi. 552, xi. 382; P. R. i. 5, ii. 

531,805,807, xii. 583 ; P.R. 366, 404, iii. 108, 203, 265, 

ii. 408, iii. 92; S.A. 558; 409, i v. 2, 42, 154, 408, 569, 

Com. 721, 7b7. 595,617. 

temperate, P. X. v. 5, xii. 636 ; tempting, P. L. ii. 607, viii. 

P. R. iii. 160, iv. 134. 308, ix. 328, 595 ; P.P. iv. 

temperately, P. R. ii. 378. 13. 

temper'd, P. L.ii. 813, vi.322, tempts, P. L. ix. 296; S.A. 

480, vii. 598 ; P. P. iii. 27 ; 1535. 

S.A. 133 ; Lye. 33 ; Com. 32. ten, P. L. ii. 671, vi. 193, ix. 

tempering, P. L. vii. 15. 1026, xii. 190; P. P. iii. 374, 

tempers, P. L. v. 347- 377; L'^7. 109 ; Ep. Hobf 

temper'ft, S. A. 6/0. I. 7- See thoufand. 

tempeft, P. L. ii. 180, 290, iii. tend, P.L. i. 183, iii. 272, iv. 

429, vi. 190 ; P.R. iv. 465; 438, ix. 156, 206, 493, 583, 

S.A. 964, 1063 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 801, xii. 106 ; S. A. 925, 

58. 1490 ; Lj/c. 65. 

s 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tendance, P. L. viii. 47, ix. 419. 
tended, P. L. v. 22, xi. 490. 
tended on, P. .ft. iv. 371. 
tender, P. P. iv. 253, v. 337, 

vii.3l5,ix.357,428,xi.276; 

P. jR. ii. 327; S. J. f)4 ; 

Xyc. 18S ; Com. 40,296,6*24; 

Ep. M. Win. 35; Pf viii. 4. 
tendereft, 6'. ^. 624. 
tenderly, P. L. ix. 991. 
tending, P. P. v. 476, ix. 212, 

x. 326, 976; S.A. 1302; 

Com. 531. 
tendrils, P. L. iv. 307. 
tends, P. L. iii. 6*94, ix. 1109. 
tenement, P. Ii. iv. 274. 
Tenerif, P. L. iv. 987. 
tenfold, P. P. ii. 705, vi. 78, 

255, S72; P. 21. i. 41. 
tenour, P.L. xi.6'32. 
tent, P. P. xii. 256. 
tenth, P. P. vi. 194. 
tents, P. L. v. 29 1, 890, xi. 

657,581,592,607,727, xii. 

135, 333 ; Pf. lxxxiik 21, 

lxxxiv. 39. 
tepid, P. P. vii.. 417. 
Terah's, Pf. cxiv. 1. 
Teredon, P. P. iii. 292. 
term, Ep. Uobf IT. 14. 
term'd, Com. 41 9. 
terms, P. L. ii. 331, vi, 6l2, 

621, x. 173, 751,757; P.R. 

iv. 173, 335 ; Com. 684. 
ternate, P.L. ii. 639. 
terrace, CW. 935. 
terraces, P. P. iv. 54. 
terrene, P. P. vi. 78. 
tcrreftrial, P. P. iii. 610, viii. 

142, ix. 103, 485. 
terrible, P. L. ii. 6/1, 682, vi. 

106, 910, ix. 190, x. 233; 

P.P. ii. l6p. 

more terrible, xi. 470. 
terrifick, P. L. vii. 497. 
terrified, P. L. x. 338. 
terrify, P. L. xii. 218; P. P, i. 

179? iv. 496. 



territory, P. P. xi. 608 ; P.R. 

iii. 3/5, iv. 82. 
terrour, P.L. i. 113, ii. 457, 

6ll, 704, vi. 134,6*47, 824, 

ix. 490, x. 667, 850, xi. Ill , 

464, xii. 238 y P. R. iv.421, 

6*27; Od. Nat. 1615 Pf 

lxxxviii. 60. 
terrours, P. P. ii. 801, 862, vi. 

735,859; P. R. iv. 431,482, 

487 ; P/ lxxxviir. 6*3. 
tefl, S.A. 1151. 
teftified, P.L. xi. 721. 
testifies, P.L.'i. 625. 
teftify, CW?. 248, 440; P/I 

lxxxi. 34. 
teftimony, P.L. vi. 33, xii. 251 ; 

P.P. i. 78; P/. lxxxi. 17. 
Tcthys', Cow. 870. 
Tctrachordon, Son. xi. 1. 
tetrarchs, P. ft. iv. 201. 
texture, P. L. vi. 348, x. 446. 
Thame, F#c. £#. 100. 
T hammuz, P. L. i. 446, 452 ; 

Od. Nat. 204. 
Thamyris, P. L. iii. 35. 
thank, P. P. iv. 386, x. 736; 

Com. 177. 
thanklefs, Lye. 66. 
thanks, P. L. iv. 47, 445, vii. 

77, viii. 5, x. 736 ; P. ii. iii. 

3 27. 
thatch 'd, Com. 318. 
thaw, P. P. xii. 194 ; Com. 853. 
thaws, P. L. ii. 590. 
theatre, P. X". iv. 141 ; <S, -4. 

1605. 
theatres, P. R. iv. 36. 
Theban, P. R. iv. 572. 
Thebes, P. L. i. 578, v. 274; 

It Vcnf. 99. 
Thebez, P. P. ii. 313. 
Themis, P. L. xi. 14; -So//. 

xx i. 2. 
themfelves, P. L. i. 334, 525, 

793, ii. 17, 501, iii. 116, 122, 

125, 128, vi. 352, 547, 6*28, 

653, 689, 864, vii. 158, ix. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

110, x. 100,541, 547, xi.5l6, 390,402,405,532,568,670, 

522, 525, 685, xii. 45, 515, 718, 853, xii. 33, 343, 458 ; 

518. P. R. i. 10, 77, 82, 203 iii. 

then, P.L. i. 93, 153, 162,225, 235, iv. 31, 26l> 269 ; S.A. 

243,531, ii. 81, 94,329,514, 943; Com,. 56, 7*9, 946, 

634, iv. 3, 403, 970, v. 15, 1016; Od. Nat. 74; Vac. Ex. 

269, 446, 447, 624, 866, 894, 9 ; Pf vii. 27, lxxxii. 8. 

vi. 103, 21S, 243, 244, 275, thenceforth, P.L. iii. 265, 333, 

742, vii. 131, 224, 239, 313, ix. 602, 870, x. 214, xi. 802, 

317, 380, 435, viii. 126, 278, xii. 109 ; P. JR. i. 79, iv. 514 ; 

290, 397, 403, 408, 446, 614, Son. xiv. 13. 

ix.37, 75, 134, 178,201,301, theologians, P. L. v. 436. 

331,337,364,378,436,470, there, P. L. i. 47, 76, 185, iii. 

$79, 562, 631, 606, 701, 703, 249, iv. 468, v. 645, 689, vi. 

707,732,753,758,761,773, 11, 117, 2/7, 339, vii. 20, 

778, 827, 830, 884, 1080, 627, viii. 144, 148, 173, 175, 

1137, 1158, 1162, 1175, x. ix. 541, 642, 849, 1105, 

40,168,173,182,185,211, 1148, 1154, x. 26*9, 376, 

414, 638, 724, 756, 768, 786, 399, 421 , 427, 547, 586, 599, 

792, 827, 895, 999, 1028, 778,933, 108S, xi. 221, 292, 

1041, xi. 17, 156, 188, 253, 385, 834, 838, xii. 137, l63, 

257, 340, 438, 515, 538, 540, 224,, 344, 453, 455 ; P. P. i. 

572,589,591,728,754,781, 157, 211, ii. 291, iii. 285, 

829, 863, xii. 5, 208, 345, 288,291, iv. 151, 247,249, 

358, 451,456, 463, 466, 482, 253, 373,396, 421, 549, 551 ; 

469,515,524,547,585,640; Lye. 178; L'AL 21, 125; 

P.P. i. 23,38, 109, 137,403, 11 Pen/. 41, 139, l6l ; Com. 

446, ii. 319, 453, 484, iii. 951, 9S0, 988, 992; Od. 

233, 251, 382, 413, iv. 221, Pqf 19, 41 ; Ep. M. Win. 
419, 586; S. A. 252, 5l6, 71 5 Brut. 8, 11, 12; Son. 1; 
882; L'AL 100, 110, 131; Pf. lxxxiii. 25, lxxxiv. 9, 
Com. 188, 56S ; Son. xvii, 7 ; 11, lxxxviii. 26. 
Od.Rat.88, 165 1 Od. D.F.I, thereafter, P. L. ii. 50; P. R. 
71; Ep. IV. S/i. 13; Ariojl, ii. 321. 

1; Pf. i. 13, ii. 9, v. 33, thereat, P. L. x. 487. 

Ixxx. 16, 80, Ixxxi. 26, 49, there be, Com. 12; Ep. Hobf. IL 

57, lxxxiii. 65, lxxxv. 46, 25 ; Pf. iv. 25. 

49, lxxxvi. 62. thereby, P. L. iii. 695, iv. 197, 

thence, P. L. i. 12, 82, 210, ix, 128, xi. 360, 792; S. A. 

234, 404, 415, 418, 515, ii. 941 ; Od. D. F. I. 12, 62. 
442, 521, 603, 929, 983, iii. therefore, P. L. ii. 187, 456, 
53, iv. 194, 230, 453, 474, iii. Ill, 131, 281, 313, iv. 
582, 806, 856, v. 480, 666, 103, 935, v. 229, 372, 404, 
vii. 109, 510, 536, 554, 616, vi. 385, 464, 6'99, 817, vii. 
viii. 233, 466, 608, ix. 62, 5l6, viii. 198, 228, 442, 60S, 
81, 812,1185, x. 344, 399, ix. 212, 279, 700, 881, x, 
480, 583, 675, 969, xi. 107, 3.93, 603, 1016, xi. 30, 0^ 



VERBAL INDEX. 



514,520,702, 801, xii. 12, 
90, 96", 287, 307, 388, 588 ; 
P. P.i. 176,206, ii. 18,140, 
225, 407, iv. 105, 146, 209, 
287, 312, 53S; S. A. 233, 
425, 79o, 825, 834, 895, 900, 
1053; IlPenf 15; Com. 58, 
78; Son. ix. 11, xvii. 13 ; 
Pf. cxxxvi. 74. 
therein, P. L. i. 652, ii. 833, 
iii. 390, v. 522, 575, viii. 
340, 584, x. 4S3, xi. 838, 
895, 896, xii. 250; P. R. ii. 
463, iii. 109; Pf. exxxvi. 
74. 
thereof, P. L. viii. 329, ix. 663, 
706, 724, x. 200, 202, xii. 
476. 
thereon, P. L. xi. 326 ; S. A. 

1505; Od. Sol.Muf 8. 
Theffalian, P. L. ii. 544. 
Theftylis, L'AL 88. 
Thetis, Com. 877. 
thick, P. L. i. 302, 311, 548, 
767, 775, ii. 264, 412, 754, 
iii. 25, 61, 362, 507, 577, 
iv. 174, 532, 980, vi. 16, 
539, 751 9 vii. 320, 358, viii. 
653, ix. 426, 446, 1038, x. 
522, 526; P. JR. ii. 263, iv. 
343, 405, 448; II Pen/. 7 ', 
Coin. 62, 470. 
thick-ramm'd, P. L. vi. 485. 
thick-warbled, P. L. iv. 246. 
thick-woven, P. L. ix. 437. 
thicken'd, P. L. xj. 742. 
thicker, P. L. x. 559- 
thickeft, P. L. ii. 537, iv. 693, 
vi. 308, ix. 1100, 1110, x. 
101, 411; Com. 132; Od. 
PaJ. 30; Pf. lxxxviii. 27- 
thicket, P. L. iv. 136, 681, vii. 
458, ix. 179, 62$, 784 ; Arc, 
58; Com. 185. 
thickets, Od. Nat. 188. 
thick fet, Com. 893. 
thief, P. L. iv. 188, 192 ; P. P. 
iy. 6'04 j &w. vii. 1, 



thievifh, Com. 1Q5, 

thigh, P. L. vi. 714; IlPenf 

142. 
thighs, P. L. i. 664, v. 282. 
thin, P. L. xii. 76; P. P. i, 

499, iv. 345. 

thin-fpun, Lye. 76. 

thing, P. L. ii. 741, iv. 563, vii f 

523, 534, ix. 449, 813, 824, 

x. 605 ; S. A. 350, 443 ; Com. 

456 ; Od. on Time, 9, 14; Pf 

lxxxv. 50. 

things, P. L. i. 16, 389, 693, 

ii. 25S, 392, 625, 962, iii. 55, 

448, 6ll, iv. 203, v. 43, 103, 

455,474, 511, 575, vi. 137, 

298, 477, 673, 893, vii. 53, 

70, 82, 122, 227, 240, 244, 

452, 636, viii. 10, 121, 159, 

191, 196, 199, 414, 565, ix. 

171, 604, 605, 682, 695, 

1025, x. 248,306, 651,707, 

xi. 579, 712, 870, xii. 140, 

271, 341, 567; P. P. i. 69, 

137, 206, 258, 300, 489, ii. 

103, 195,305,324,379,400, 

426, 447, iii. 51, 111, 122, 

183, 239, iv. 224, 296, 31S, 

435, 56'4; S. A. 250, 926, 

942, 1358, 1451, 1532; Com. 

703 ; Od. PaJ): 28 ; Od. Sol. 

Muf 4 ; Vac. Ex. 45 ; Hor. 

III. 1 ; Pf. iv. 12, lxxxvii. 9. 

all things, P. L. ii. 190, 278, 

844, iii. 155, 446, 448, 

675, iv. 434, 599, 611, 

667 y 692, 752, 999, v. 46, 

183, 470, 581, 837, vi. 

708, 736, vii. 591, viii. 265, 

340, 363, 476, 493, 524, 

ix. 194, 343,402,539, 722, 

804, x. 7, 26'9, 380, 850, 

xi. 56, 160,161,309,900, 

xii. 6l 8. 

think, P.P. i. 66l, iii. 480, iv. 

366, 432, 675, 759, 835, v. 

433, vi. 13.5,271, 282,437, 

495, vii, 635, viii. 174, 224 ? 



VERBAL INDEX. 



-S81, ix. 303, 370, 830, 938, 

xi. 292, 465; P. R. i. 387, 

iii. 109, 399, iv. 286; 

■S. A. 295, 445, 930, 1335, 
1534; Com. 366, 755, Od. 

Nat. 105 ; Od. PqJJ\ 55 ; 

Od. D. F. I. 74, ; Ep, Hobf. 

11. 32. 
thinking, P. L. x. 564, 1021 ; 

P. R. iv. 496 ; Ep. Hobf. I. 

12. 
thinks, P. L. iii. 6SS. 
think'it, P. P. viii. 110, 403, 

x. 592; P. Pt. ii. 177, iii. 

163 ;Pf. viii. 13. 
thinner, P. P. viii. 348, ix. 

142. 
third, P. L. i. 705, iv. 869, v. 

283, vi. 699, 748, x. 82, xii. 

267, 421; P. Pt. iv. 296; 

S. A. 1466; Brut. 3. 
third part, P. L. ii. 692, v. 7 10, 

vi. 156. 
thirft, P. X. iv, 228, 330, v. 

305, vii. 68, viii. 8, 202, ix. 

586, x. 556, 568, xi. 846; 

P.P. i. 339, iv. 120, 593; 

S. A. 551, 5S2, 1456; Com. 

68, 678. 
thirfted, P. L. iv. 336. 
thirity, P.L. v. 190 ; Com. 524 ; 

Pf. lxxxiv. 21. 
thirty, S. A. 1186, II96; Vac. 

Ex. 94. 
Thifbite, P. P. ii. 16. 
thiftles, P. P. x. 203; Com. 

352. 
thither, P. L. i. 183, 357, 655, 

656, 674, ii. 354, 596, 954, 

979, 1054, iii. 573, iv. 452, 

456, 555, 593, 890, 963, v. 

266, 7^7, 770, vii. 290, 513, 

572, ix. 630, x. 629, xi. 200, 

344, 433, 837, xii. 75, 366 ; 

P.R.i. 250, ii.291,iv.374; 

S. A. 1450, 1521, 1738; 

Com. 987; Vac. Ex. 12; 

Brut. 10. 



thither-ward, P. L. iii. 500, viii, 

260. 
Thone, Com. 675. 
thorn, P. P. iv. 256; S. A. 

1037. 
thorns, P. P. x. 203 ; P. P. ii. 

459. 
thorough fore, P. P. x. 393. 
though, P. P, i. 53, 87, 97, 

105, 125, 141, 153, 262, 279, 

361, 394, 444, 507, 576, 624, 
631, 763, 791, ii- 13, 18, 
112, 147, 224, 251, 254, 321, 
337, 349, 358, 432, 457, 498, 
682, 790, 813, 835, 99?, 
1044, iii. 99, 152, 159, 17'6, 
192, 245, 278, 286, 305,428, 
465, 530, 552, 585, 602, 686, 
690, iv. 13, 62, 167, 169, 
281, 295, 375, 392, 663, 674,, 
675, 706, S90, 941, 973, 
1009, X.75, 358,374, 394, 
426\ 428, 553, 574, 580, 833, 
8/5, 903, vi. 11, 36, 91, 
118, 124, 144,226,229,265, 
297 \ 304, 377, 405, 429, 435, 
457, 593, 660, vii. 18, 25, 
26, 31, 50, 99, 112, 148, 
170, 331, 356, 368, 497, 
552, viii. 92, 108, 117, 129, 
215,289,335,402,421,463, 
485, 500, 506, 598, ix. 70, 
128,139,171,224,296,301, 
304, 377, 390, 428, 432, 468, 
485, 490, 551, 60 1, 610, 648, 
664, 715,746, 805, S 10, 930, 
945, 1065, x. 91, 109, 135, 
165,173,227,274,331,335, 

362, 557, 592, 600, 690, 692, 
716,741,759,794, 830,836, 
878, 977, xi. 31, 40, 71, 
117, 173, 177, - 1 80, 272, 330, 
332, 459, 492, 496, 509, 5S5, 
604, 6ll, 760, 886, xii. 2, 
37, 96, 140, 201, 307, 403, 
410, 494, 514, 51/, 576, 603, 
621 ; P. R. i. 52, 92, 177, 
232, 377, 494, ii. 8, 63, iii, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

20, 123, 154, 303> iv. 23, thoufand thoufand, P. L. \\v 

290, 417, 488, 512, 612; 383. 

S. A. 248, 323, 333, 844, ten thoufand, P. L. i. 545, ii. 

933,1238, Arc. 100, 106; 934, iii. 488, vi. 836, vii. 

Com. 338 ; Sow. x. 9, xvi. 1 ; 559; P. P- iii. 411. 

P/. ii. 12, lxxxvii. 7. ten thoufand fold, P. .L. xi. 

thought, P. L. i. 54, 56*0, iv. 678. 

50, 198, 320, 457, 7.94, v. ten thoufand thoufand, P. X. 

37, 159, 384, 576, 665, 727, v. 588, vi. 767. 

828, vi. 20, 98, l6'4, 192, twenty thoufand, P. L. vi. 769. 

236, 430, 500, 538, vii. 53, thoufands, P. L. i. 760, vi. 48, 

82, 139, 603, 611, viii. 3, 148, 270, 373; P. R. iii. 

280, 506, ix. 319, 555, 790, 304; Son. xix. 12. 

857, 898, 977, 1004, 1110, by thoufands, P. L. vi. 594. 

1179, x. 219, 788, 1017, Thracian, P.L. vii. 34. 

1 049, xi. 400, 770, xii. 558 ; thraldom, S. A. 946. 

P. R. i. 204, ii. 13, 146, thrall, P. L. x. 402; P. P. i. 

266, 481, iv. 11, 495, 520; 411 ; $. A. 370, l6'22 ; Pf 

S. A. 117, 231, 302, 659, lxxxi. 28. 

870, 871, 908, 1092, 1531, thralls, P. L. i. 149- 

1688 ; Com. 408, 505, 566 ; Thrafcias, P. L. x. 700. 

Sow. xxii. 13 ; Od. Nat. 88; threads, S. A. 26 1 ; ^rc. 16. 

Oo 7 . P>. P.P. 10; Pf. vii. 7. threaten, P. P. iv. 464. 

thought following though t,P. R. threaten'd, P. L. iv. 968, vi. 

i. 192. 359, ix. 715, 870; S. A. 852. 

thoughts, P. L. i. 88, 557, 659, threatening, P. £. ii. 177, 705, 

6'S0, ii. 115, 148, 283, 354, iii. 425, iv. 77, ix. 939, xi. 

421, 526, 558, 630, iii. 37, 641; P. R. iv. 489; S. A. 

171, iv. 19, 95, 062, 688, 1198; Sow. xvi. 12. 

807, v. 28, 96, 209, 232, threatenings, Pf lxxxviii. 62. 

552, 676, 712, vi. 90, 367, threatens, P. L. ii. 441 ; P. R. 

581, 629, viii. 40, 167, 183, ii. 128. 

1S7, 414, 590, ix. 88, 101, thrcatener, P. L. ix. 687- 

130,213,229,288,471,473, threats, P. L. iv. 968, v. 889, 

572,603,843, 918, x. 608, vi. 283, 287, ix. 53, 685; 

975, 1008, xi. 498, xii. 275, Com. 39, 586. 

377 ; P. P. i. 190, 196, 227, three, P. L. ii. 645, 646, v. 382, 

2229, ii. 107, iii. 227; S. A. viii. 130, x. 323, 324, 364, 

19, 459, 524, 623, 1383; xi. 4l6, 736, 866, xii. 188; 

Com. 192, 210, 371, 383, P. R. ii. 433, iii. 412 ; Com. 

669 ; Od. Nat. 92 ; Vac. Ex. 953, 969, 982 ; Son. xxii. 1. 

2.3. three and twentieth, Son. vii. 2. 

thoufand, P. L. i. 796- ii. 967, three-bolted, P. L. vi. 764. 

v. 249, vii. 382, viii. 601 ; threefold, P. L. ii. 645. 

Lye. 135; UAL 63; Com. threefcore, P. P. iii. 411. 

205, 627,926; Od. Nat. 100; three times, Ep. M. Win. 7. 

Od. Sol. Mvf 12 ; Pf Ixxxiv. threAYd, L'Al. 1 08. 

36". threfliing- floor, P. L. iv, 9S4. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



threshold, P. L. x. 594,; Com. 1. 

threw, P. L. ii. 5-45, 755, iv. 
40, 609, vi. 639, 804, vii. 
46*8. 

threw down, P. L. iii. 391. 

thrice, P. L. i. 74, 619, ii. 645, 
iv. 115, ix. 16, 64, x. 855; 
S. A. 392, 396, 1222 ; Com. 
Q14 915. 

thrice-great, II Pen/. S3. 

thrift, Com. l67. 

thrilling, Od. Nat. 103. 

thrive, P. L. ii. 26l. 

thriv'd, P. JR. i. 114; £. A 
637. 

thrives, P. L. x. 236. 

throat, P. X. xi. 713 ; Pf. v. 
28. 

throes, P. L. 780; Pp. M. Win. 
26. 

throne, P. L. i. 42, 105, 639, 
ii. 1, 23, 68, 104, 138, 241, 
267, 320, 445, 959, iii- 148, 
314, 350, 649, 655, iv. 89, 
597, 944, v. 163, 585, 656 f 
670, 725, 868, vi. 5, 88, 103, 
133, 426, 679, 758, 834, vii. 
137, 556, 585, x. 28, 382, 
445, xi. 20, 82, 389, xii. 
323,370; P. R. i. 171, 240, 
ii. 212, 424, 425, 440, iii. 
33, 153, 169, 357, 383, 395, 
408, iv. 100, 108, 147, 271, 
379, 471,603; Arc. 15; Od. 
Nat. 84, 164 ; Od. D. F. I. 
56; Od. on Time, 17; 0d. 
Sol. Muf. 7 ; Vac. Ex. 36. 

thron'd, P. L. i. 386, iii. 58, 
305,377, vi. 772, 890; P. R. 
iv. 596; Od.Nat. 145; Od. 
Cir. 19. 

throned, P. L. i. 128. 

thrones, P. L. i. 360, ii. 310, 
430, iii. 320, v. 363, 601, 
749, 772, 840, vi. 199, 366, 
723, 841, vii. 193, x. 86, 
460, xi. 232, 296; P. R. ii. 
121, iv. 85. 



throng, P. L. iv. 831, v. 650, 
vi. 308, vii. 297, ix. 142, x. 
453, xi. 671 ; P. R. i. 145; 

S. A. 1609; Od. Nat. 58. 

throng, (verb) P. L. i. 780; 
Com. 206. 

throng'd, P. L. i. 76l, vi. 83, 
857, xii. 644; P. R. iii. 
260. 

thronging, P. L. i. 547, ii. 555; 
S. A. 21; Com. 713. 

throngs, UAL 11 9. 

throttled, P. P. iv. 568. 

through, P. L. i. 118, 177, 288, 
366, 375, 395, 464, 518, 544, 
567, 595, ii. 148, 156, 262, 
406, 412, 464, 473, 544, 6l 8, 
641, 663, 684, 771, 783, 829, 
943, 948, 953, 974, 1001, 
1014, 101S, iii. 16, 52, 87, 
133, 254, 358, 378, 400, 544, 
564, 574, 590, 605, 651, 657, 
685, 729, iv. 223, 224, 227, 
272,538,555,789,868,934, 
976, v. 11, 50, 225, 251, 
253,267,292,298,439,665, 
692, 874, 904, vi. 1, 7, 166, 
203, 248, 330, 368, 384, 392, 
749, 873, 8S9, vii. 92, 134, 
229, 246, 299, 373, 404, 574, 
viii. 141, 421, ix. 179, 520, 
637, 641, 676, 783, 789, 891, 
1110, x. 188, 394,407,411, 
418,441,522,607,636,643, 
667, 709, 830, 846, 897, 902, 
xi. 17, 68, 562, 673, xii. 49, 
208, 216, 226, 313, 449, 452, 
455, 489, 649; P> R. i. 5, 
16, iii. 62, 65; S. A. 45, 96, 
97, 369, 670, 1050, 1489, 
1599 ; L'Al. 47, 56 ; II Pen/. 
70; Com. 333, 425, 569, 
906, 945, 972 ; Son. xxii. 13 ; 
Od. Nat. 4,8, 52, 156; Vac. 
Ex. 39 ; Brut. 1 ; Hor. I. 6 ; 
Pf. vi. 14, viii. 24, lxxxi. 
19, lxxxi v. 23, IxxxviiL 37, 
66. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



throughout, P. L. i. 754, v. 

726, vi. 344, 833, vii. 237, 

532; P.R. iv. 150. 
throw, Lye. 139; 0d. Nat. 42; 

Od. Puff. 30; Pf. lxxx. 28, 

Ixxxv. 51. 
thrown, P. L. i. 741, iv. 225, 

vi. 843 ; P. R. iv. 3 ; S. A. 

1097. 
thrown off, P. L. iii. 362; 

Pore, of Con. 1. 
thrown out, P. L. x. 887. 
throws, P. .L. i. 56, iii. 562, 

741. 
thruft, P. L. ii. 857, iv. 508 ; 

S. A. 367. 
Thummim, P. it. iii. 14. 
thunder, P. L. i. 93, 174, 258, 

601, ii. 66, 166, 294, 477, 

S82, iii. 393, iv. 928, v. 893, 

vi. 606, 632, 713, 764, 854, 

ix. 1002, x. 33, 666, 780, 

xii. 181,229; P.P. i-90, iv. 

410; S. A. 1651, 1696; Arc. 

51; Com. 804; Od.Nat. 156; 

Vac. Ex. 42; Pf. lxxxi. 29. 
thunder-bolts, P. L. i. 328, vi. 

589. 
thunder-clafping, Pf. exxxvi. 

37. 

thunder-ftruck, P. L. vi. 858 ; 
P. R. i. 36. 

thunder, (verb) P. L. x. 780. 

thunderer, P. L. vi. 491. 

thunderer's, P. L. ii. 28. 

thundering, P. L. i. 233, 386, 
vi. 487, x. 814; S. A. 1353. 

thunderous, P. L. x. 702; Vac. 
Ex. 36. 

thunders, P. L. ii. 267, vi. 836, 
vii. 606. 

thus, P. />. i. 83, 127, 192, 
266, 272, 327, 559, 746, 789, 
ii. 10, 92, 118, 142, 164, 
194,195,226,228,309,378, 
389, 429, 466, 486, 506, 6' 14, 
680,741,746,784,816,849, 
«71, 914, 968, 988, iii. 40, 



79, 135, 143, 152, 156, 167, 

226,273,416,653,693,699, 
736, iv. 31, 105, 114, 246, 
357, 359, 374, 409, 440, 467, 
476, 504, 505, 560, 576, 610, 
634,689,720,781,787,810, 
822,834,865,877,885,902, 
903,924, 977, 1005, v. 17, 
27, 67, 93, 94, 152, 155, 
307,321,361,371,396,451, 
460, 561, 562, 594, 599, 672, 
718, 771, 808, 843, 852, 876, 
vi. 28, 113, 130, 150, 171, 
200, 261, 281,417, 450, 536, 
557, 608, 620, 679, 706, 722, 
800, 893, vii. 69, 109, 110, 
138,232,252,446,518,535, 
626, 634, viii. 4, 7, 65, 159, 
179,217,249,277,281,283, 
337, 349, 356, 367, 368, 378, 
434, 500, 521, 595, 644, ix. 

82, 97, 98, 144, 158, 204, 
220, 226, 272, 321, 322, 341, 
342,371,378,385,393,457, 
472, 474, 531, 535, 536, 527, 
552, 567, 610, 614, 6*46, 659, 
678, 726, 744, 794, 807, 855, 
886, 894, 920, 922, 960, 
1016,1074,1119,1131,1133, 
1143, 1187, x. 33, 67, 85, 
102,105,115,124,144,157, 
161,174,192,197,229,234, 
264, 353, 383, 545, 572, 590, 
596, 602, 706, 7 1 9, 756, 823, 
837, 845, 863, 866, 913, 914, 
946,966, 1012, xi. 1,21,41, 

83, 140, 162, 170, 192, 225, 
250, 269, 286, 289, 295, 334, 
370, 422, 449, 452, 453, 466, 
503, 504, 507, 597, 603, 628, 
676, 683, 698, 762, 785, 787, 
869, xii. 6, 61, 63, 79, 105, 
190, 244, 269, 285, 386, 468, 
502, 552,574, 609; P. R. i. 
43, 129, 195, 397, ii. 58, 120, 
152,378,432, iii. 6, 64, 164, 
346, 386, iv. 170, 367, 426, 
450, 485, 550, 560, 636; 



VERBAL INDEX. 



S.^. 85, 98, 965; Lye. 186; 

L'Al. 115; II Penf. 121; 

€om. 153, 897, 911; Od. 

May-M.9; P/.iii.5,lxxxviii. 

36. 
thus far, P. X. i. 587, ii. 22, 

21 1, 321, v. 803, vi. 700, vii. 

230, viii. 177, 437, x. 370. 
thus high, P. X. ii. 7, 8. 
thus low, P. X. ii. 81. 
thus much, P. X. iv. 899. 
thwart, P. X. viii. 132, x. 703, 

1075. 
thwarting, Arc. 51. 
thwarts, P. X. iv. 557. 
Thyeftean, P. X. x. 6*88. 
thyme, Lye. 40. 
Thyrfis, X'^/. 83; Com. 494, 

512, 657. 
tiar, P. X. iii. 625. 
Tiberius, P.P. iii. 159- 
tide, P. X. xi. 854. 
tidings, P. X. v. 870, x. 36, 

346, xi. 226, 302, xii. 375, 
504; P. E. i. 109, ii. 62; 
S. A. 1567. 

Tidore, P. X. ii. 639. 
tie, S. A. 308; L'Al. 143. 
tiger, P. X. iv. 403, vii. 467 ; 

P. H. i.313; Com. 71. 
tigers, P. X. iv. 344; Com. 

534. 

Tigris, P. X. ix. 71. 
tiles, P. X. iv. 191. 
till, P. X. i. 4, 227, 299, 325, 

347, 365, 418, 776, ii. 527, 
537, 717, 740, 755, 778, iii. 
125, 458, 499, 712, 742, iv. 
40, 534, 606, 912, v. 31, 35, 
187,253,270,369,376,478, 
vi. 2, 10, 246, 262, 268, 396, 
479, 650, vii. 36, 107, 157, 
313, 380, 435, 551, viii. 
190, 258, 518, ix. 72, 207, 
219, 246, 575, 596, 622, 
803, 894, 1016, 1044, 1065, 
x. 101, 206, 352, 513, 574, 
£07, 632, 938, 1084, xi. 



40, 61, 82, 178, 498, 534, 
535, 550, 586, 588, 664, 
744, 758, 795, 828, 900, xii. 
24, 58, 106, I69, 194, 199, 
207, 267, 351, 539, 555; 
P. R. iii. 85, 284, iv. 
282, 544; S. A. 250, 304; 
L'Al. 99 ; II Pen/. 42, 173 ; 
Com. 136, 252, 321, 459, 
463, 468, 570, 643, 840, 888, 
943, 1007 ; So?i. x. 5, xv. 11 ; 
Od. dr. 18; Od. on Time, 
1 ; Pf. lxxxiii. 14, 56, 59. 

till now, P. X. ii. 744, iv. 466, 
vi. 208, 429, 432, ix. 858, 
1023, x. 369. 

till then, P. X. i. 93, 638, ii. 
690, viii. 206, ix. 766, 787, 
x. 646, xi. 198, xii. 90, 333 ; 
P. R. iii. 382. 

till, (verb) P. X. vii. 332, viii. 
320, xi. 97, 26l. 

tillage, P. X. xi. 434. 

tilth, P. X. xi. 430. 

tilting, P. X. ix. 34, xi. 747. 

timber, P. X. xi. 728. 

timbrel, Pf. lxxxi. 6. 

timbrell'd, Od. Nat. 219. 

timbrels, P. X, i. 394 ; S. A. 
1617. 

time, P. X. i. 36, 253, 769, ii. 
210, 274, 297, 348, 603, 774, 
894, iii. 284, iv. 6, 489, 639, 
v. 38, 493, 498, 580, S48, 
859 f vii. 177, viii. 474, ix. 
70, 464, x. 24, 74, 91, 345, 
606, xi. 244, 859, xii. 152, 
l6l, 301, 554, 555 ; P. P. i. 
56, 58, 109, 269, 286, ii. 43, 
iii. 182, 183, 396, 433, 440, 
iv. 15, 123, 174, 282, 378, 
380,4>75,507,558,6l6;S.A. 
22, 402 ; Com. 435, 743 ; Son. 
vii. 1, 12, xx. 5, xxi.ll ; Od. 
Nat. 135, 239; Od. on Time, 
1,22; Ep. M. Win. 9; Ep. 
Hobf.il. 7,8, 15, 23;P/iv. 
18, lxxx. 2, lxxxi, 11, 64, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



any time, Ep. Hobf. I. 7. 

each time, S. A. 397. 

for a time, P. JR. ii. 14. 

in time, P.P. iii. 298; 5. A. 
1390. 

no time, 5. A. 1708. 

fecond time, P. P. ii. 275. 
timelefsly, Or/. P>. P. I. 2. 
timely, P. P. iii. 728, iv. 6l4, 

vii. 74, x. 1057; S.A 602; 

Com. 6'S9; S™. i- 9- 
timely-happy, Son. vii. 8. 
times, P. P. xii. 243, 437 ; P. P. 

i. 228, iii. 94, 187; 6*. .4. 

406, 6'95. 
time's, Vac. Ex.71. 
Timna, S. A. 219, 383, 795. 
Timnian, S. A. 1018. 
timorous, P. P. ii. 1 1 7, Vi. 857 ; 

P. P. iii. 241 ; S. A. 740. 
tin&uxe, P. L. vii. 367. 
Tine, Pac. P*. 98. 
tine, P. P. x. 1075. 
tinfel, P. L. ix. 36. 
tipfy, Cow. 104. 
tipt, P. L. vi. 580. 
tir'd, S.A. 1326; Cow. 688. 
tire, P.P. vi. 605. 
Tirefias, P. P. iii. 36. 
tiffued, Od. Nat. 146. 
tifiues, P. P. v. 592. 
Titan, P. P. i. 510. 
Titanian, P. P. i. 198. 
title, P. P. xi. 163, xii. 70; 

P. P. iv. 199- 
title-page, Son. xi. 6. 
titled, P. P. xi. 622; P. P. ii. 

179, iii- 81. 
titles, P.P. ii.311,v.773,801, 

xi. 793, xii. 516. 
tittle, P.P. i. 450. 
titulur, P. P. v. 774. 
to and fro, P. P. i. 772, ii. 605, 
1031, iii. 533, vi. 328, 643, 
66.5. 
toad, P. P. iv. 800 ; Son, xi. 13. 
Tobias, P, I. v. 222. 



Tobit's, P. P. iv. 170. 
toe, L'Al. 34. 
toes, Cow. 962. 

together, P. P. v. 696, vi. 215, 
316, 857, ix. 1095, 1099, 
1112, x. 287, 290, 785, xi. 
739; S.A. 1521; Lye. 27 ; 
Pf ii. 4. 
toil, P. P. i. 319, 698, ii. 1041, 
iv. 327, vi. 257, ix, 242; 
P.P. ii. 453; S.A. 5; Com. 
687; Pf. lxxxi.21, cxiv. 2. 
toil'd, P. P. vi. 449. 
toil'd out, P. P. x. 475. 
toils, S. A. 933. 
toilfome, P. P. iv. 439, xi. 

179. 
toil'ft, P. P. iv. 498. 
told, P. P. vii. 178, 179, vi". 
521, ix. 863, 886, x. 40, xi. 
298; P. P. i. 245, iii. 184, 
iv. 472 ; S. A. 1433 ; Ep. 
M. Win. 8 ; Vac. Ex. 48 j 
Ep. Hobf. II, 23 ; P/ lxxxiii. 
35. 
told'ft, P. P. i. 137; Com. 694. 
tolerable, P. P. ii. 460, x. 654> 

977. 
tomb, S. A. 986, 1742 ; Ep. M.- 

Win. 34; Ep.W.Sh. 16. 
tones, P. P. v. 626; P.P. iv. 

255. 
tongue, P. P. ii. 112, vi. 135, 
3 54, 297,360, vii. 113, 603, 
viii. 219, 272, ix. 554, 6*74, 
749, x. 518, 519, xi. 620; 
P. R. i.479, "J- 5 5, iv. 5; 
S. A. 1066 ; Com. 6*92, 76l ; 
Son. xiii. 8 ; Vac. Ex. 2, 10; 
Pf v. 28, lxxxi. 20. 
tongue-batteries, S. A. 404. 
tongue-doughty, S. A. 1181. 
tongues, P. P. vii. 26, x. 507, 
xii. 53, 501 ; P. P. i. 374, 
iii. 55, 280; Cow?. 208. 
took, V. L. ii. 554, 872, iii. 365, 
vi. 549, 79o t vii. 225, 35& 



VERBAL INDEX. 



viii. 300, 465, 536, ix. 455, 

347, 1004, 1043, xi. 82, 223, 

517, xii. 649; P. P. iii. 251, 

iv. 394 ; S. A. 227, 86*9, 

1183, 1203 ;0d. Rat. 20, 9$; 

Ep. W. Sh. 12; Ep. Hobf.I. 

16. 
took in, Com. 20, 56 1. 
took leave, P. L. iii. 739. 
took'ft, P. L. ii. 765; 5. A. 

838, 1591. 
tools, P. L. xi. 572 ; 5. A. 137 ; 

P/: vii. 48. 
top, P. L. i. 6, 289, 515, 614, 

670, ii. 545, iii. 504, 742, v. 

59S, vii. 6, 585, viii. 303, xi. 

378, 851, xii. 44, 227,588; 

P. R. ii. 217, 286, iii. 265 ; 

S.A. 167; Lye. 54; Cow. 94. 
topaz, P. L. iii. 597- 
Tophet, P. L. i. 404. 
tops, P. L. iv. 142, v. 193, vi. 

645, vii. 287, 424, xi. 852. 
topt, P. R. iv. 548. 
torch, P. L. xi. 590. 
torches, Com. 130. 
tore, P. L. i. 542, ii. 543, 783, 

vi. 588, vii. 34; S.A. 128, 

1472. 
torment, P. L. iv. 893, viii. 244, 

ix. 121, x. 998; P. it. iv. 

305, 632 ; S. A. 606. 
torment, (verb) P. L. x. 781, 

xi. 769. 
tormented, P. L. vi. 244. 
tormenter, P. It. iv. 130. 
tormenters, S. A. 623. 
tormenting, P. X. iv. 505. 
torments, P. L. i. 56, ii. 70, 

169,274, iv. 88, 510; P. R. 

iii. 208. 
torn, P.L. i.232, ii.926, 1044, 

iv. 994; Od. Nat. 187- 
torn up, P. It. iv. 419. 
torrent, P. L. ii. 581, vi. 830, 

vii. 299. 
torrid, P. L. i. 297, ii. 904, 

xii, 634. 



tortuous, P. £. ix. 516. 
torture, P. -L. i. 67, xi. 481 ; 

S. A. 1569. 
torturer, P. L. ii. 64. 
tortures, P. L. ii. 63, ix. 469. 
torturing, P. L. ii. 91. 
tolling, P. L. i. 184, xi. 489- 
toft, P. L. iii. 490, ix. 1126, 

x. 287, 71S. 
total, P. L. iv. 665, vi. 73, viii. 

627, x. 127; S.A. 81. 
touch, P. L. iii. 608, iv. 686, 

812, vi. 485, 520, 584, viii. 

579, 617, 663, ix. 1143, x. 

563, xi. 561 ; S. A. 549 ; 

Arc. 87 ; Com. 406. 
touch, (verb) P. L. v. 411, vi. 

566, vii. 46, viii. 530, ix. 651, 

742,925, x.45; S. ^. 951 ; 

Arc. 87; Com. 270, 663, 91 8 ; 

Od. JVta. 127 ; 0d. So/. Mm/: 

13. 
touch'd, P. L. iv. 811, vi. 479, 

vii. 258, viii. 47, ix. 380, 688, 

987,xi.425;S.^.262,1107; 

Lye. 77, 138; Son. xx. 11; 

Od. D. F. I. 10. 
touches, P. L. i. 557. 
touching, P. R. ii. 370. 
tough, P. It. i. 339. 
tour, P. L. xi. 185. 
tour, or tower, (verb) P. L. vii. 

441. 
tournament, P. L. ix. 37, xi. 

652. 
toward, P. L. i. 284, 669, ii. 

642, iii. 435, 739, viii. 231, 

257, ix. 495, x. 64, xi. 38 ; 
S.A. 682; Lye. 31; Arc. 81; 
Sow. vii. 12 ; P/. lxxxiv. 16, 
lxxxvi. 45, cxiv. 14. 

towards, P.L. ii . 477, 5 1 6, 63 1 , 
873, iii. 89, 350, 581, iv. 27, 
29, vi. 648, ix. 375, x. 28, 

258, 941, xi. 848, 854, xii. 
40, 215, 296; S. A. 334, 
668, 772, 792, 911 sP/v. 20, 
lxxxv. 16. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tower, P. X. i. 591, iv. 30, xii. 

44, 51, 73 ; II Pen/. 86 ; Com. 

935; Son. viii. 11. 
tower, or tour, (verb) P. X. vii. 

441. 
tower'd, P. X. i. 733, ix. 498 ; 

L'Al 117; ^rc. 21. 
towering, P. X. ii. 635, v. 271, 

vi. 110; P. ii. ii. 280. 
towers, P. X. i. 499, »• 62, 129, 

1049, iv. 211, v. 758, 907, 

xi. 640 ; P. H. iii. 329 ; iv. 

34, 545; S. A. 266; L'AL 

77 ; Od. Paf. 39- 
town, P. P. i. 332, iii. 22 ; Son. 

xi. 3. 
towns, P. X. xi. 639 ; P. Jl. iii. 

233. 
toy, P. X. ix. 1034 ; P. .R. ii. 

223 ; Com. 502. 
toys, P. R. iv. 328 ; // Pen/. 4 ; 

Ftfc. X*. 19. 
trace, (fubfl.) P. X. vii. 481. 
trace, P, X. ix. 682, xi. 329 5 

Com. 423. 
tracM, P. X. iv. 949. 
traces, Com. 292. 
tracing, P. R. ii. 109. 
track, P. L. i. 28, ii. 1025, v. 

498, vi. 76 t ix. 510, x. 314, 

367, xi. 354; P.R.i. 191. 
tradt, Com. 30. 
trade, Pf. vii. 58. 
trading, P. X. ii. 640. 
tradition, P. X. x. 578. 
traditions, P. X. xii. 512 ; P. P. 

iv. 234. 
tradue'd, S. A. 979- 
tragedians, P. R. iv. 26l. 
tragedy, // Ptnf. 97- 
tragick, P. X. ix. 6. 
trail, & J. 1402. 
train, P. L. i. 478, ii, 873, 

iv. 349, 649, v. 166, 351, 

767, vi. 143, vii. 221, 306, 

444, 574, ix. 387, 516, 548, 

x. 80, xi. 862, xii. 131 ; 

P. R. ii. 355, iii. 96$ j & A. 



721; IlPenf. 10; Com. grTs ; 

-Sow. i. 14; Ep.M. Win. 37, 
train' d up, P. X. vi. 167. 
training, P. X. vi. 553. 
trains, P. X. xi. 624 ; S, A, 

533, 932; Com, 151, 
traitor, S. ^4. 401, 832; Com, 

690. 
traitrefs, 5. A. 725. 
trample, P. X. iv. 1010. 
trampled, P. X. ii. 195. 
trampling, Od. Nat. 215. 
trance, P. X. viii. 462 ; Od. Nat. 

179; 0d.Pqf.42. 
tranfacl;, P. X. vi. 286. 
tranfeend, P. X. v. 457. 
tranfeendent, P. X. i. 86, ii. 

427, x. 614. 
transfer, P. X. x. 165 ; 6'. A. 

241. 
transferr'd, A X. v. 854, vi. 

678, x. 56. 
transfix, P. X. i. 329- 
transfixed, P. X. ii. 181. 
transform, P. X. i. 370. 
transformed, P. X. ii. 785, iv„ 

824, ix. 507, x. 519; Son, 

xii. 5 ; Od. D. F. I. 27. 
transforms, Com. 527* 
transfus'd, P. X. iii. 389, vi. 

704. 
tranfgrefs, P. X. i. 31, iii. 94, 

iv. 880, vi. 912, vii. 47, viii. 

643, ix. 902, xi. 253; Oct. 

Cir. 21. 
tranfgrefs'd, P. X. viii. 330, ix. 

Il6l. 
tranfgrefics, S. A. 758. 
tranfgrcfling, P. X. v. 244, ix. 

H69. 
tranfgreffion, P. X, x. 49, xiL 

399 ; S. A. 1356. 
tranfgrcfTions, P. X. iv. 87.9 J 

S.A. 820. 
tranfgreflbur, P. X. xi. 164. 
tranfgrciTours, P. X. x. 72. 
tranfient, P. X. xii. 554. 
tranfition, P. X, xii. 5. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tranfitory, P. L. iii. 446; P. JR. 

iv. 209. 
tranflated, P. X. iii. 46 1 ; Com. 

242. 
iranflucent, S. A. 548 ; Cow. 

861. 
tranfmigration, P. X, x. 26l. 
tranfparent, P. X. vii, 265. 
tranfpicuous, P. L. viii. 141. 
tranfpires, P. X. v. 438. 
tranfplanted, P. X. iii. 293, vii. 

360. 
tranfported, P. X. viii. 529, 

530, ix. 474, x. 626. 
tranfporting, Od. Pajf. 38. 
tranfports, P. X. i. 231, iii. 81, 

viii. 567* 
tranfubftantiate, P. X.v. 438. 
tranfverfe, P. X. iii. 488, xi. 

563. 
trap, Cow. 699. 
trappings, P. X. ix. 36. 
travel, (fubft.) P. X. x. 593 ; 

Ep. M. Win. 49. 
travel, P. X. ii. 980, v. 222. 
travell'd, P. X. iii. 501. 
traveller, Com. 64, 200. 
traveller's, Com. 332. 
travelling, P. X. viii. 138. 
travels, Pf. vii. 51. 
traverfe, P. X. i. 568. 
travers'd, P. X. ix. 434. 
traverfmg, P. X. ix. 66. 
treacheroufly, 5. A. 1023. 
tread, (fubft.) P. L iv. 866, vi. 

73; 5. ^. 111; Com. 91. 
tread, P. X. ii. 828, iv. 632, v. 

201, x. 190, xi. 630; P.P. 

i. 488; Com. 899; Pf- vii. 

14. 
tread down, P. X. i. 327. 
treading, P. X. ii. 941. 
treads, Com. 635. 
treafon, P. L. iii. 207; S. A. 

391, 959. 
treafonous, Com. 702. 
treafure, P. P. ii. 427 J Cow. 

399; Vac. Ex.18. 



treafures, P. X. i. 688 ; P. It 

iii. 29. 
treafury, Son. x. 2. 
treat, P. L. xi. 588; P. it. ii. 

335, iv. 264 ; S. A. 482, 591. 
Trebifond, P. L. i. 584. 
treble, P. L. i. 220. 
tree, P. X. i. 2, iv. 195, 395, 

427, 644, v. 51, 57, vii. 46, 

542, viii. 306, 321, 323, ix. 

73,576, 591,594,617,644, 

651, 660, 661, 723, 727, 834, 

850, 863, 1026, 1033, 1095, 

x. 121, 143, 199, 554, xi. 320, 

426, 858; P. P. iv. 147, 434; 

Com. 983 ; Ep. M. Win. 30 ; 

P/.i.7. 
tree of knowledge, P. X. iv. 

221, 423, 424, 514, ix. 751, 

752, 848, 849. 
tree of life, P. L. iii. 354, iv. 

194, 218, 424, viii. 326, xi. 

94, 122 ; P. R. iv. 589- 
trees, P. L. iv. 147, 217, 248, 

421, v. 309, 426, vii. 324, 

459, viii. 304, 313, ix. 618, 

795, 1118, x. 101,558, 1067, 

x. 28, xi. 124, 832 ; P. P. 

ii. 263, 354 ; L'Al. 78 ; Com. 

147. 
trees of God, P. X. v. 390, vii. 

538. 
trees of life, P, X. v. 652. 
tremble, P. X. xii. 228 ; S. A. 

1648. 
trembled, P. X. ii. 676, 788, 

ix. 1000. 
trembling, P. X. iv. 266 ; Lye* 

77 : P/: ii. 25. 
Tremifen, P. X. xi. 404. 
trench, P. X. i. 677. 
Trent, Fac. £#. 93 ; Fore, of 

Con. 14. 
trepidation, P. X. iii. 4S3. 
•trefpafsj P. X. iii. 122, ix. 6g3, 

889, 1006; S. A. 691 ; P> 

lxxxv. 36. 

trefles, P, L. iv. 305, 497, v. 10, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ix. 841, x. 511 ; Co?n. 753, 

929; Od.JSfat. 187. 
trial, P. L. i. 36*6, iv. 855, viii. 

447, ix. 316, 366, 370, 380, 

96l,975,1177;P.£.iii.l96, 

iv. 206; S. A. 1175, 1288; 

Com. 329, 592; Pf i. 13. 
tribe, S.A. 217, 265, 876, 1479, 

1540. 
tribes, P. L. iii. 532, vii. 488, 

xi. 2/9, xii. 23, 226; P.P. 

iii. 374, 403, 414 ; S. A. 242, 

976. 
tribulation, P. L. xi. 63. 
tribulations, P. P. iii. 336 ; 

P.P. iii. 190. 
tribunal, P. L. iii. 326. 
tributary, Com. 24. 
tribute, P. P. v. 343, viii. 36; 

P. P. iii. 258. 
trick'd, IZ Pen/. 123 
tricks, Pore, of Con. 13. 
tricks, (verb) Lye. 170. 
trident, P. P. x. 295. 
tridents, Com. 27. 
tried, P. L. iv. 896, v. 532, vi. 

120,418, vii. 159, viii. 271, 

ix. 317, xi. 63, 805; P. R. 

i. 4, iii. 189; S. A. 1086; 

Com. 970; P/I lxxxi. 31. 
tries, P/. vii. 38. 
trifle, P. P. iv. 165. 
trifles, P. P. iv. 329- 
triform, P. X. iii. 730. 
trills, P. P. iv. 246. 
trim, S. A. 717 ; L'AL 75 ; 11 

Pen/. 50 ; Com. 120; Od.Nat. 

33. 
trimming, Fac. Px. 19- 
Trinacrian, P. L. ii. 66l. 
Trinal, Oc/. Nat. 11. 
trine, P. L. x. 6*59- 
trip, UAL 33-, Arc. 99; Com. 

118. 
triple, P. L. ii. 569, v. 750, vi. 

572, 650; Sou. xviii. 12. 
triple-colour'd, P. P. xi. 897' 



tripp'd, P. R. ii. 354. 
tripping, P. L. xi. 847; Fee 

Ex. 62. 
trippings, Com. 961. 
trips, Vac. Ex. 3. 
Triton, P. P. iv. 276. 
Triton's, Com. 873. 
trivial, P.P. ii. 223; S.A. 

142, 263 ; Com. 502. 
triumph, P. P. iii. 254, vi. 886, 

vii. 180, x. 537, 546, -xi. 695, 

788; P.P. i. 173, iii. 36, iv. 

138,624; S.A. 426, 1312. 
triumph, (verb) P. L. ix. 948 ; 

Com. 9?4> ; Pf. v. 36. 
triumphal, P. P. vi. 881, x. 

390 ; P.P. iv. 37. 
triumphals, P. P. iv. 578. 
triumphant, P. P. iv. 975, v. 

693, vi.889, x.464,xi.491; 

Od. Cir. 2. 
triumph'd, P. L. x. 186, 572. 
triumphing, P. P. iii. 338, xii. 

452 ; Od. on Time, 22. 
triumphs, P. P. xi. 723 ; L'AL 

120. 
triumphs, (verb) P. P. i. 123. 
trod, P.L. ix. 526; P. P. ii. 

307; Com. 569, 96 1; Sow. 

xiv. 6; P/I lxxxvi. 5. 
trod down, P. P. iv. 620. 
trodden, P. P. i. 682, ix. 572. 
troll, P. L. xi. 620. 
troop, P. L. i. 437. 
troop, (verb) P. P. vii. 297 ; 

Com. 603 ; Od. JVflf. 233. 
trooping, P. P. i. 760. 
troops, P. R. iii. 311; S.A. 

138 ; Xj/c. 179- 
trophies, P. P. i. 539, x. 355 ; 

P. P. iv. 37 ; S. A. 470, 

1736; IlPenf. 118; Sow. 

xvi. 6. 
Tropick, P. I. x. 675 ; P. ft. 

iv. 409. 
trot, Ep. Hobf. II. 4. 
trouble, P. L. v. 34, 96, \u 



VERBAL INDEX. 



6*34, xi. 103; P. JR. ii. 87, 
126; S.A. 1300; Pf vii. 52, 
lxxxi. 25, lxxxviii. 9. 

trouble, (verb) P, L. vi. 272, 
xii. 209; Pf ii. 11. 

troubled, P. L. i. 557, ii. 534, 
h: 19, 315, v. 882, vii. 216, 
x. 36, 718; P.P. ii. 65, 333, 
iv. 1; S. A. 185; Pf. vi. 6; 
Ixxxiii. 6l, 62, cxiv. 7. 

troubles, P. L. iv. 575 ; P. P. 
ii. 460 ; Pf v. 27. 

troublefome, P. L. iv. 740. 

Troy, P. L. ix. 16; 1/ Pen/. 
100; Bra*. 11. 

truce, P. L. ii. 526, vi. 407, 578, 
xi. 244; P. R. iv. 529. 

true, P. £> iii* 104, iv. 98, 196, 
250, 251, 282, 294, 295, 750, 
900, v. 305, vi. 430, viii. 384, 
589, ix. 788,982, 1024, IO69, 
x. 494, 789, xi. 361, 790, xii. 
83, 145, 274,358; P. R. i. 
231, 35S, 433, iii. 60, 63, 
139, 373, 405, 441, iv. 290, 
347, 596', S.A. 91, 418, 
430, S23, 1756; Com. 10, 
170, 3S5, 511,905, 997; Son. 
x. 13, xix. 6 ; Od. Nat. 227 ; 
Od. D. F.I. 41, 45;Eurip. 
1 ; Pf lxxxvi. 56. 
more true, P. R. i. 431. 

trueft, <S\ A. 654. 

truly, P. L. iv. 491 ; P. P. iii. 
372 ; S. A. 75\< ; Pf lxxxiv. 
46. 
mod truly, Ep. Hobf II. 1. 

trump, Od. Nat. 156 ; Od. Paff. 
26. 

trumpery, P. X. iii. 475. 

trumpet, P. L. vi. 60, 203, 526, 
vii. 296, xi. 74; P. P. i. 19; 
Od. Nat. 58. 

trumpet's, P. L. xii. 229. 

trumpets' Pf lxxxi. 10. 

trumpets, P. L. i. 532, 754, ii. 
515; S. A. 1598. 

trunk, P.L. vii, 4l6, ix, 589. 



truft, (fubft.) P.L.ii.46; S.A. 

348,428, 1001, 1140; Com. 

31, 682. 
trull, P. L. ii. 17, v. 788, x. 

881, xii. 328,418; Com. 370; 

£o«. xxiii. 7 ; Pf iv. 24, v. 

33> lxxxvi. 8. 
trufted, P. L. i. 40, vii. 143, x. 

877; ^.^.199. 
trufting, P.L. vi. 1 19, xii. 133 ; 

S.A. 1178. 
truth, P. L. iii. 338, iv. 293, v. 

771, 902, vi. 32,33, 122, 173, 

381, ix. 738, x.755, 856, xi. 

667, 704, 807, xii. 303, 482, 

490,511, 533, 535; P. R. i. 

205, 220, 453, 462, 464, 472, 

478, ii. 473, iii. 183, 443; 

3*^.215, 870, 1276; Com. 

691,971; Son.\n. 5, viii. 4, 

xii. 10, xiv. 12, xv. 11, xvi. 

4, xviii. 3 ; Od. Nat. 141 ; 

Od.on Time, 16; Od. D. F. 

I. 54; Ep. Hobf. I. 5, 

II. 8; Ariojl. 3; Hor. II. 
1 ; Pf lxxxv. 41, 45, lxxxvi. 
8. 

truth's, P. L. xii. 569; P. P. 

iii. 98. 
try, P. X. i. 269, iv. 941, v. 

727, 865, vi. 120, 818, viii. 

75, 437, ix. 860, x. 254, 382 ; 

P. R. i. 123, 224, ii. 225, iv. 

198, 532 ; 6'. A. 1399 ; Co?n. 

793, 806, 857. 
tub, Com. 708. 
tube, P. L. iii. 590. 
tuft, P. L. iv. 325, ix. 417- 
tufted, Lye. 143 ; UAL 78 ; 

Com. 225. 
tufts, P. L. vii. 327. 
tugg'd, S. A. 1650. 
tumble, Cow. 927. 
tumid, P. L. vii. 288. 
tumours, S. A. 185. 
tumult, P. L. ii. 966, 1040, vi. 

674; Com. 202, Pf ii. 1 
tumults, P. X. v. 737. 



*©!,, I, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tumultuous, P. L. ii.936, iv. 16. 

tun, P. L. iv. 8l6\ 

tune, P. L. v. 196 ; 5. A. 66 1 ; 

Arc. 72; Od Paffl 8. 

in tune, Od. So/. Mnf. 26. 
tuneable, P. L. v. 151 ; P. P. 

i. 480. 
tun'd, P. L. iii. 366, vii. 436, 

559, ix. 549; P. P. i. 182. 
tuneful, P.P. ii. 290 ; Son. 

xiii. 1. 
tunes, 7/ Pen/. 117 '. 
tunes, (verb) P. P. iii. 40, v. 41 . 
tunings, P. P. vii. 59S. 
tun'ft, Sow. xiii. 11. 
turbans, P. P. iv. 76. 
turbulencies, P. P. iv. 46*2. 
turbulent, P. L. ix. 1 126 ; P. P. 

iv. 461 ; S. A. 552, 1040. 
Turcheftan-born, P. L. xi. 396. 
turf, P. L. v. 391, xi. 324; 

Lye. 140 ; Com. 280. 
turkis, Com. 894. 
Turkifti, P. L. x. 434. 
turms, P. P. iv. 66. 
turn, (fubft.) P. L. vii. 380, viii. 

491. 
turn, P. P. iii. 582, v. 413, 441, 

497, 630, vi. 234, 291, 562, 

x. 668, 672, 1093, xi. 373, 

806, xii.471, 510; P. R. ii. 

220; S. A. 708; Lye. 21; 

Arc. 66 ; Od. D. F. I. 67 ; 

Pf. vi. 7, lxxx. 13, lxxxi. 59, 

lxxxv. 14, 21, lxxxvi. 57. 
turn afide, P. L. xi. 630. 
turn forth, Com. 222, 224. 
turn'd, P. L. iii. 500, 582, 624, 

646, 71 8, 736, iv. 410, 480, 

502, 536, 721, 741,978, v. 

420, 906, vi. 284, 509, 649, 

881, vii. 213, 228, viii. 257, 

507, ix. 527, 603, 834, 920, 

x. 192, 546, 688, 909, xi. 

675,714, xii. 176; P. it. ii. 

37, iii- 138; S.J. 139,396, 

539, 1614. 
turneys, IlPwf 118. 



turning, P. L. ii. 63, 96S, v. 

255, P. R. m.293;Od.Nat. 

48. 
turnings, Com. 569. 
turns, P. L. i. 495, ii. 876, v. 

332, vii. 129, ix. 330 ; Com. 

462 ; Pf. vii. 58. 

by turns, P. L. ii. 598, vi. 7. 

up-turns, Pf. lxxx. 54. 
Turnus, P. L. ix. 17. 
turret, P. X. ix. 525. 
turrets, P. P. iv. 54. 
turtle, Od. Nat. 50. 
Tufcan, P. P. i. 288 ; Com. 48 ; 

6'ow. xx. 12. 
tufked, Pf. lxxx. 53. 
twain, S. A. 929; P3/C. 110; 

Com. 284. 

in twain, Pf. exxxvi. 45. 
Tweed, Vac. Ex. 92. 
twelve, P. P. iii. 597, xii. 155, 

226; P. P. ii. 96. 
twenty, P. L. vi. 769 5 -Ep* 

Jfcri/. I. 3. 
twice, P. P. ix. 859 ; P* P. i. 

210, ii. 314, iii. 281; S.A. 

24, 361, 635 ;Pf lxxx vii. 17. 
twice-batter'd, Od. Nat. 199. 
twice-ten, P. P. x. 669. 
twigs, P. L. ix. 1105. 
twilight, P. L. i. 597, iv. 598, 

v. 645, vi. 12, vii. 583, ix. 

50; IlPcnf. 133; Arc. 99; 

Com. 856; Od. Nat. 188. 
twin- born, Son. xii. 6. 
twine, P. P. iv. 318 ; Od. Nat. 

226. 
twines, P. P. v. 21 6. 
twin'd, P. L. xii. 85. 
twins, P.P. x. 674; Com. 1010. 
twifted, LVi/. 48 ; Co?n. 862. 
twitch'd, Pyc. 192. 
'twixt, P. L. i. 346, v. 589, vi. 

104, ix. 51; S.A. 562; Od. 

D. F. I. 69. 
two, P. L. ii. 714, iii. 33, 65, 

iv. 288, 382, 404, 505, 732, 

786, 790, 820, 874, 1002, r. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



13$, $66, vi. 305, 313, 366, 
684, 685, 688, 699, vii. 201, 
&46, viii. 151, ix. 203, 211, 
x. 82, 289, 1072, xi. 57, 186> 
454, 565, 600, xih 169, 197, 
254, 431 ; P. R. u 159, iii- 
$55,377iS>A.l606 9 l633; 
Lye. 110; Com. 291, 578, 
1010; Son. xvii. 8; Vac, 
Ex.6. 

two and two, P. L. viii. 350. 

two-handed, P. L> vi. 251. 
only two, P. X. ix. 415. 
thefe two, S. A. 209. 
us two, P. L.x. 924,, 990, 
you two, P. L. x, 397. 

ty'd, P. X. i. 426. 

type, P. L. i. 405. 

types, P. L. xii. 232, 303. 

Typhoean, P. L. ii. 539- 

Typhon, P. L. i. 199 ; Orf. Fat. 
226. 

tyrannick, P. P. i. 219 ; S. A, 
1275, 

tyrannize, P. L. xii. 39. 

tyrannous, P. X. xii. 32. 

tyranny, P. L. i. 124, ii. 59 ', 
xii. 95; 5. ^. 1291. 

tyrant, P. L. x. 466, xii. 96* 
173 ; Son. xviii. 12. 

tyrants, P/I exxxvi. 10. 

tyrant's, P. L. iv. 394. 

Tyre, Pf. lxxxiii. 27, lxxxvii. 
15. 

Tyrian, Com. 342 ; Od. Nat. 204. 

Tyrrhene, Com. 49. 



U. 

uglier, P. L. ii. 662. 
ugly, P. L. x. 539. xi. 464. 
ugly-headed, Coin. 695. 
ulcer, P. Li xi. 484. 
ultimate, P. P. iii. 210. 
Ulyfles, P.L. ii. 1019; Coot. 

637* 
Ulyfles', Vac. Ex. 50, 



Umbrage, P. L. ix. 108/. 
umbrageous, P. X. iv. 257. 
umpire, P. L. ii. 907, iii - 195. 
unable, P. L. x. l65 f 750 ; 6'. A. 

896. 
unacceptable, P. X. ii. 251. 
unaccomplished, P. L. iii. 455. 
unacquainted, Com. 180. 
una&ive, P. L. iv. 621, viii. 97 ; 

P. P. ii. 81 ; S. A. 1705. 
unadmoniuYd, P. L. v. 245. 
unador'd, P. X. i. 738. 
unadorn'd, P. jL. iv. 305, vii. 

314. 
unadorned, Com. 23. 
unadventurous, P. P. iii. 243. 
unaffeded, P. P. iv. 359. 
unagreeable, P. L. x. 256* 
unaided, P.L. vi. 141. 
unalterably, P. L. v. 502. 
unalter'd, P. P. i. 4Q3. 
unamazed, P. L. ix. 552. 
unanimous, P. L. iv. 736, vi. 

95, xii. 603; P.P. i. 111. 
unanfwerM ; P.L. vi. 163. 
imappaU'd, P. R. iv. 425. 
unapparent, P. L. vii. 103. 
unappeafable, £. A. 963. 
unapproached, P. jL. iii. 4. 
unapprov'd, P. L. v. 118. 
unargued, P. i. iv. 636. 
unarm'd, P.P. iv. 6265 S. A. 

126, 263, 1111. 
unarmed, P.L. iv. 552, vi. 595 ; 

Com. 582. 
unauail'd, Com. 220. 
unaflay'd, P. L. ix. 335. 
unattempted, P. L. i. 16. 
unattended, P. L. viii. 60. 
unattending, Com. 272. 
unaware, P. £. ii. 156, iii. 547, 

ix. 362. 
unawares, P. L. ii. 932, v. 73 1 ; 

S.A. 1522. 
unbarr'dj P. L. vi. 4. 
unbecoming, P. 2/. vi. 237« 
unbefitting, P. L. iv. 759. 
unbegot, P. L. x. 988. 



t 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



unbeheld, P. L. iv. 674. 
unbelief, Com. 519- 
unbenighted, P. L. x. 682. 
unbenign, P. L. x. 66l. 
unbefought, P. L. x. 1058. 
unbid, P. L. x. 204. 
unblam'd, P. L. iii. 3, ix. 5, 

xii. 22. 
unblemifh'd, Cow. 215. 
unblench'd, Com. 4-30. 
unbleft, P. L. i. 238, x. 988 ; 

Com. 907 ; Pf v. 14. 
unborn, P. L. iv. 663, vii. 220, 

xi. 502. 
unbofom, Od. Paff. 53. 
unbofom'd, S. A. 879' 
unbottom'd, P. L. ii. 405. 
unbound, P. L. iii. 603. 
unbounded, P. L. iv.6*0, x.471. 
unbroken, P. L. ii. 691. 
unbuckled, P. Z. xi. 245. 
unbuild, P. L. viii. 81, xii. 526. 
uncall'd, P. L. ix. 523. 
uncelebrated, P, L. vii. 253. 
uncertain, P. L. iii. 76 ; P. H. 

iv. 326; Cow. 360. 
unchang'd, P. L. vii. 24. 
unchangeable, P. L. iii. 127. 
unchafte, S. A. 321, 325 ; Com. 

464. 
uneheck'd, P. L. viii. 189. 
uncheerful, P/l lxxxviii. 11. 
uncircumcis'd, 8. A. 260, 640, 

1364. 
uncircumfcrib'd, P. L. vii. 170. 
unclean, P. L. ix. IO98 ; S. A. 

321, 324, 136*4. 
unclouded, P. L. x. 65. 
uncolour'd, P. L. v. 189. 
uncompaffionate, &'. /tf. 818. 
uncom pounded, P. L. i. 425. 
unconcern'd, P. L. xi. 174. 
unconfirm'd, P. R. i. 29. 
unconform, P. L. v. 259. 
unconjugal, 6'.^. 979- 
unconniving, P. jR. i. 363. 
unconquerable, P. L. i. 106, 

Ti. 118. 



unconquer'd, Com. 448. 
unconfcionable, S. A. 1245. 
unconfum'd, P. L. i. 69, ii. 648. 

uncontrollable, S. A. 1754. 

uncontrolled, Com. 793. 

uncovered, P. L. ix. 1059- 

uncover'ft, 5. A. 842. 

uncouth, P. L. ii. 407, 827, v. 
98, vi. 362, viii. 230, x. 475 ; 
S. A. 333; Lye. 1&6;UA1.5. 

uncreate, P.L. v. 895, ix. 943. 

uncreated, P. L. ii. 150, vi. 268* 

uncropt, P. L. iv. 731. 

unction, P. X. vi. 709. 

unctuous, P. L. ix. 635. 

uncull'd, P. L. xi. 436. 

undaunted, P. L. ii. 677, 955 t 
iv. 851, vi. 113; S.A. 1623. 

undazzled, P. L. iii. 614. 

undeck'd, P. L. v. 380. 

undefil'd, P. L. iv. 76 1. 

undelay'd, P/. vii. 59. 

undelighted, P. L. iv. 2S6. 

under, P. L. i. 130, 207, 313, 
345, 477, 602, 659, ii- 1S3, 
26l, 322, 498, 886, iii. 242, 
275, 319, 322, 424, 514, 640, 
iv. 88, 122, 239, 282, 325, 
451, 47S, 496, 572, 721, v. 
137, 288, 46*3, 587, 609, 687, 
698, 776, 830, vi. 67, 142, 
215,409,478,521,533,6*52, 
777, 779,832, vii. 159, 283, 
402, 408, 422, viii. 470, ix. 
208,492, 774, 925, x. 154, 
190, 445, 1003, xi. 320, 511, 
725, 740, 749, xii. 24, 39, 
320, 539,6*18; P. R. i. 305, 
ii. 262, 354 ; iv. 404 ; S. A. 
49, 636 ; Lye. 26 ; UAL 68 ; 
11 Pefif. 94; Arc. 31, S8 ; 
Com. 184, 294, 562, 604; 
Vac. Ex. 41, 78; Pf. vii. 2. 

underfoot, P. L. iv. 700. 

undergo, P. L. i. 155, ix. 953, 
971, x. 126,575; Od. Patf. 
12; Pf. lxxxviii. 63. 

undergone, P.R. ii. 132. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



under-ground, P. L. vi. 196, 

666,~vii. 301, 469, ix. 72, xi. 

570, xii. 42. 
under-growth, P. L. iv. 175. 
underling, Vac. Ex. 76. 
undermine, P. R. i. 179. 
underminers, S. A. 1204. 
underneath, P.L. i. 701, iii. 

518, iv. 22.5, v. 87, vi. 659, 

vii. 268 ; P. R. iv. 454, 456* ; 

Vac. Ex. 95. 
underftand, P. L. vi. 625, viii. 

345,540,xii.376; P/.lxxxii. 

17. 
underftanding, P. X. v. 4S6, vi. 

444, ix. 1127. 
understood, P. L. i. 662, iv. 55 t 

v. 450, vi. 626, viii. 352, ix. 

1035, x. 344, 883, xii. 58, 

514; P.R. i. 436, 437, ii. 

100; S.A. 191. 
undertake, P. L. ii. 419. 
undertook, P. L. i v. 935, x. 74; 

P. Pt. i. 100, 374, ii. 129. 
underwent, Com* 841. 
undeferv'd, P. X. xii. 27- 
undeiervedly, P. L. xii. 94. 
Undefirable, P. L. ix. 824. 
undetermin'd, P. JD. ii. 1048. 
undimininYd, P. 7^. i. 154, iv. 

856. 
undifcording, Od. Sol, Muf. 

17. 
undifguis'd, P. JR. i. 357- 
undifrnay'd, P. L. ii. 432, vi. 

417. 
undififembled, S. ^. 400. 
undifturbed, Od. Sol. Muf 6. 
undo, P. L. ix. 926, 944 ; Com* 

903. 
undone, P. I/, iii. 235. 
undoubted, P. L. i. 679 ; P. #. 

i. 11. 
undoubtedly, P. L. x. 1093. 
undrawn, P. L. vi. 751. 
undreaded, P. L. x. 595. 
undying, P. L. vi. 739. 
unc-arn'd, P. £. ix. 225. 



uneafy, P.L. i . 295 ; P.£. i v.584. 
uneloquent, P. L. viii. 219. 
unemployed, P. X. iv. 617; 

S. A. 580. 
unenchanted, Com. 395. 
unendear'd, P. L. iv. 766. 
unenvied, P. L. ii. 23. 
unequal, P. L. vi. 453, 454; 

6'. A. 346. 
unequall'd, P. L. ix. 983. 
unequals, P. L. viii. 383. 
unefpied, P.L. iv. 399, vi. 523. 
uneffential, P. L. ii. 439. 
uneven, P. R. ii. 173. 
unexampled, P. L. iii. 410. 
unexempt, Cow. 685. 
unexpected, P. L. vi. 774, xi. 

268 ; P. R. ii. 29. 
unexpectedly, 5'. A. 1750. 
unexperienc'd, P. L. iv. 457 ; 

P.P. iii. 240. 
unexpreffive, Lye. 176; Od. 

Nat. 116. 
unfaithful, P. L. xii. 46l, 481. 
unfaftens, P. L. ii. 879. 
unfear'd, P. L. ix. 187. 
unfeign'd, P. i. vi. 774, viii. 

603, x. 1092, 1104. 
unfelt, P. L. ii. 703, viii. 475. 
unnnifh'd, S. A. 1027. 
unfit, Pf. lxxxviii. 16. 
unfold, P. L. iv. 381, v. 568, 

vi. 558, vii. 94, xi. 785 ; 

P.P. i. 82, ii.239; II Pen/. 

8y ; Com. 786 ; Sow. xvii. 5 ; 

P/. lxxxviii. 48. 
unfolding, P. X. x. 63. 
unforbid, P. L. vii. 94. 
unforeknown. P.L. iii. 119. 
unforefeen, P. L. ii. 821. 
unforewarn'd, P. L. v. 245. 
unform'd, P. X. vii. 233. 
unfortunate, P. L. x.970; P. it. 

i. 358; S. A. 74,7, 1743, 
unfound, P. L. vi. 500. 
unfounded, P. L. ii. 829- 
unfrequented, P. £. i. 433 ; 

S.A. 17. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



unfriended, P. R. ii. 413. 
unfulfilled, P. L. iv. 511. 
unfum'd, P. L. v. 349. 
unfurl'd, P. L. i. 535. 
ungodly, P. L. vii. 185 ; S. A. 

898 ; Soph. 2. 
ungovern'd, P. L. xi. 517. 
ungraceful, P. L. viii. 218. 
ungratefully, Fac. Ex. 78. 
unguarded, P. L. vi. 133, x. 

419 ; Com. 283. 
unhallow'd, P. i. ix. 931 ; 

Com. 757. 
unhappily, P. L. x. 917. 
unhappy,P.L.i.268, ix. 1136; 

Com. 511. 
unharbour'd, Com. 423. 
unhardy, P. P. iii. 243. 
unharmonious, P. L, xi. 51. 
unhazarded, S. A. 809. 
unheard, P. X. i. 395, 738, iii. 

645. 
Unheeded, P. L. iv. 350. 
unheedy, £p. M. Win. 38. 
un-hide-rbound, P. L. x. 601. 
unholy, P. L, xi. 106; L'J/, 

4. 
unhop'd, P. L. x. 348. 
unhord, P, L. iv. 188. 
unhous'd, Od. JO. F, I. 21. 
urihumbled, P. R. iii. 429. 
unhurt, P. X. vi. 444. 
unimaginable, P. L. vii. 54. 
unimmortal, P. L, x. 6ll. 
unimplor'd, P. Z«. iii, 231, ix. 

22. 
uninform'd, P. T*, viii, 486, 
uninjur'd, Com. 403. 
uninterrupted, P, /^. iii. 68, 
unin vented, P. />. vi. 4/(1. 
union, P. L. ii. 36, v. 6*12, vi. 

63, vii. l6l, viii. 431, 604, 

627, ix. 966 ; Od. Nat. 108 ; 
Pi'. Ixxxiii. 20. 
unifon, /'. L. vii. 599. 
unite, P. L. iv. 263, ix. 314, 

x. 2 17; Od. Sol. Muj\ 27; 

Pf. Ixxxiii. 19, 



united, P. L. i. 88, 560, 629, 

iv. 230, v. 610, 831, ix.608 ; 

P.P. iii. 229; S.A. 1110. 
unites, P. L. x. 364, xii. 382. 
Unity, Od.Nat. 11. 
unity, P. L. viii. 425. 
univerfal, P. L. i. 541, ii. 951, 

iii. 48, 317, 676, iv. 266, v. 

154, 205, vi. 34, 797, vii. 

257, 316, viii. 376, ix. 6l2, 

x. 505, 508, xi. 821 ; S. A. 

1053, 1511; Lye. 60; Od. 

Nat. 52. 
univerfallv, P. L. ix. 542; S. A. 

175. 
univerfe, P. L. ii. 622, iii. 584. 

721, vii. 227, viii. 360, ix. 

684; P. P. i. 49, iv. 459. 
unjointed, S. A* 177. 
unjuft, P. L. ii. 200, iii. 215, 

v. 818, 819, 831, xi. 455, 

xii. 294; P.P.ii,45,iii.9S; 

S. A. 695, 703 ; Com. 590 ; 

Sen. 3 ; Pf. vii. 46. 
unjuftly, P. L. vi. 174. 
unkindly, P. L. iii. 456, ix. 

1050 ; Com. 269. 
unkindnefs, P. L. ix. 271. 
unknown, P. L. ii. 443, 444, iii. 

496, iv. 830, vi. 262, vii. 75, 

494, ix. 6lQ, 756, 757, 86*4, 

905, xii, 55, 134 ; P. P. i. 

25, ii. 413,444; S.A. 180; 

Com. 361, 634. 
unlaid, Corn. 434. 
unlefs, P. L. ii. 236, 915, iii. 

210, viii. 186, ix. 44, 125, 

X. 1032 ; P. R. iii. 352, iv, 

351 ; S.A. 295, 66*3; Com, 

26*7, 417. 
unlet ter'd, Com. 174. 
Unlibidinous, P, iv. v. 449* 
unlicensed, P. £. iv. 909. 
unliehtfpme, P. X. vii. 355, 
unlike, P. L. i. 75, vi. 517, ix. 

1114; &4. 815, 1510. 
unlimited, P. L. iv. 435. 
unlock, P. I, ii, 852 ; Cam, 852, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



unlock'd, S. A. 407 ; Com. 756. 
unlook'd, P. R. ii. 31. 
unmake, P. X. iii. 163. 
unmanly, £. A. 417. 
unmark'd, P. X. x. 441 ; P. #. 

i. 25. 
unmeafur'd, P. X. v. 399. 
unmeditated, P. L. v. 149. 
unmeet, P. X. viii. 442. 
unmerited, P. X. xii. 2/8. 
unminded, P. L. x. 332. 
unmindful, P. X. vi. 369, - X] "» 

6ll ; Cow. 9 ; Od. #or. 12. 
unmix'd, P. X. vi. 742 ; P. #. 

iii. 48. 
unmov'd, P. X. i. 554, ii. 429, 

iv. 455, 822, v. 898, viii. 532, 

xi. 192 ; P. R. iiii. 386, iv. 

109. 
unmoulding, Com. 529. 
unmuffle* Com. 231. 
unnam'd, P. X. vi. 263, x. 595 t 

xii. 140. 
unnumber'd, P. X. ii. 903, vii. 

432. 
unobey'd, P. X. v. 670. 
unobnoxious, P. X. vi. 404. 
unobfcur'd, P. X. ii. 265. 
unobferv'd, P. X. iv. 130; P. #. 

iv. 638. 
unoppos'd, P. X. vi. 132. 
unoriginal, P. X. x. 477. 
unown'd, Com. 407. 
unpaid, P. X. v. 782. 
unpain'd, P. X. vi. 455. 
unparallel'd, *S'. A. 165 ; ^rc. 25. 
unpeopled, P. X. iii. 497. 
unperceivd, P. X. iii. 681, xi. 

224. 
unpierc'd, P. X. iv. 245. 
unpillow'd, Com. 355. 
unpitied, P. X. ii. 185, iv. 375; 

P. #. i. 414. 
unplaufible, Com. 162. 
unpolluted, P. X. ii. 1395 Com. 

46l. 
unponefs'd, P. X. viii. 153. 
tmpradis'd, l\ X. viii. 107. 



unprais'd, P. X. ix. 232 ; P. #• 

iii. 103 ; Com. 723. 
unpremeditated, P. X. ix. 24. 
unprepar'd, P. X. viii. 197. 
unprevented, P. X. iii. 231. 
unprincipled, Co?/?. 367* 
unproclaim'd, P. X. xi. 220. 
unprofit, S. A. 119. 
unpronounc'd, Vac. Ex. 4. 
unpurg'd, P. X. v. 419. 
unpurged, Arc. 73. 
unpurfued, P. X. vi. 1. 
unquenchable, P. X. vi. 877; 

S. A. 1422. 
unquiet, P. X. v. 11, x. 975. 
unrazor'd, Com. 290. 
unreal, P. X. x. 471. 
unrecorded, P. il. i. 16. 
unreform'd, P. ii. iii. 429. 
unrein'd, P. X. vii. 17. 
unremov'd, P. X. iv. 987. 
unrepentant, P. H. iii. 429. 
unrepented, S. A. \3j6. 
unrepriekv'd, P. X. ii. 185. 
unreprov'd, P. X. iv. 493. 
unreproved, L'AL 40. 
unrefpited, P. X. ii. 185. 
unreft, P. X. ix. 1052, xi. 

174. 
unrevok'd, P. X. v. 602. 
unrighteous, P. X. iii. 292. 
unrivall'd, P. X. iii. 68. 
unfafe, P. X. vi. 309. 
unfaid, Com. 5S6. 
unfavoury, P. X. v. 401 ; Com. 

742. 
unfay, P. X. iv. 95, 9*7 ; P. H. 

i. 474. 
unfea re liable, P. X. viii. 10. 
uniearch'd, P. X. iv. 789. 
unfeafonable, P. X. viii. 201. 
unfedue'd, P. X. v. 899. 
unfeemliel't, P. X. ix. i094. 
unfeemly, P. X. x. 155 ; tf. A. 

690. 
uni'cen, P. X. ii. 659, 841, iii. 

585, iv. 130, 67S, viii. 485, 

x. 21,448, xi. 205, 071, mi. 



-VERBAL INDEX. 



49,361; L'Jl.57; II Pen/. 
65, 154; Com. 230. 
unfettled, P. R. iv. 326. 
unfhaken, P. L. iv. 64, v. 899 ', 

P.P. iv. 421 ; Son. xv. 5. 
unfliar'd, P. L. ix. 880. 
unlhed, P. L. xii. 1/6. 
unfhorn, 5'. A. 1143 ; Fac. P*. 

37. 
unfhower'd, Od. Nat. 215. 
unfightly, P. L. iv. 631, vii. 

314, xi. 510; Com. 629. 
unfkilful, P. L. xi. 32. 
unfleeping, P. P. v. 047. 
unfmoothly, P. L. iv. 631. 
u 11 fought, P. L, iii. 231, viii, 
503, ix. 366, 370, x. 106 ; 
P. P, ii. 59 ; Cow. 732. 
unfound, P. L. vi. 121. 
unfpar'd, P. L. x. 606. 
u'nfparing, P. L. v. 344. 
unfpeakable, P. L. iii. 662, v. 

156, vi. 297. 
unfphere, II Pen/. 88. 
unfpied, P. L. iv. 529. 
unfpoil'd, P. P. xi. 409. 
unfpotted, P. L, iii. 248 ; Com. 

1009. 
unliable, Pf. v. 25. 
unftain'd, 6'om. x. 3 ; 0<i. Nat. 

57. 
unfteady, Arc. 70. 
unfubftantial, P. P. iv. 399- 
unfuccceded, P. L. v. 821. 
unfuccefsful, P. £. x, 35. 
unfuck'd, P. L. ix. 583. 
imfufferabie, P. L. vi. 867; 0d, 

Nat. 8. 
unfuitable, P. R. iii. 132. 
unfung, P. P. i. 442, vii. 21, 

253, ix. 33; P. P. i. ]7. 
unfunn'd, Com. 398. 
unfuperiluous, Com. 773. 
unfupported, P. L. ix. 432. 
unfufpcft, P. L. ix. 771. 
un/ufpeaed, P. L. ix. 69. 
unfufpicious, S. A. 1635. 
unfuftain'd, P. Z>. ix. 430. 



uatam'd, P. L. ii. 337. 
untaught, P. L. ii. 9. 
untcrrified, P. P. ii. 70S, v. 

899- 
unthank'd, Com. 723. 
u nth ought, P. L. ii. 821. 
unthread, Com. 6l4. 
unthrone, P. P. ii. 231. 
until, Ep. Hobf. II. 6. 
untold, Arc. 41. 
untouch'd, P. L, ix. 621. 
untraceable, P, L. x. 476, 
untrain'd, P. P. xii. 222. 
untried, P. L. iv. 934, ix, 

860; P. P. i. 177; Od. Hor. 

13. 
untrod, P. L. iii. 497 ; P. P. i. 

398 ; Od. Nat. 19. 
untroubled, P. L. viii. 289; 

P.P. iv. 401. 
unt witling, L'Al. 143. 
unvalued, £/>. W. Sh. 11. 
unvanquiih'd, P. L. vi. 286. 
unveil'd, P. L. iv. 608. 
unviolated, & A. 1144. 
unvihted, P. L. ii. 398. 
unvoyageable, P. L. x. 366. 
unus'd, S. A. 1231. 
unufual, P. L. i. 227 ; Com. 

552. 
unutterable, P. L. xi. 6, 
unwaken'd, P. L. v. 9. 
un wares, Od. D. F. I. 20. 
unwary, P. L. v. 695, ix, 614, 

x. 94-7 ; S. A. 930 ; Com. 538, 
Unwearied, P. L. vi. 404, vii. 

552. 
unweeting, P. L. x. 335, 9l6"; 

P.P. i. 126; Cow. 539; 0</. 

P>. P, I. 23. 
unwectingly, S. y/. l680. 
unwelcome, P. L. x. 21. 
unwept, Lye. 13. 
unwholefome, *S'. A. 9. 
unwieldy, P. L. iv. 345, vii, 

411; S.A.54,. 
unwilling, P. L. xii. 6l7, 
unwillingly, S. A. 14. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



unwife, P.L. vi. 179 ; P. R- "i. 

115; Soji. xx. 14. 
unwifer, P. X. iv. 716. 
unwithdrawing, Com. 711* 
unwonted, Od. ifor. 8. 
unworfhipt, P. X. v. 670. 
unworthy, P. X. x. 1059, xii. 
91, 622; P. R. iv. 346; 
6'. ^. 1424. 
unwounded, P. X. vi. 466 ; S, A, 

1582. 
up, P.L. x. 503; P. JR. i.432, 

ii. 117, 285, iv. 541; S.4- 

1215, 1349 ; Com. 979 ; Son. 

ix. 6; P/i lxxxviii. 55. 
up and down, P. X. ii. 841, iii* 

441, x. 287. 
up or down, P. X. iii. 574. 
upbore, P. X. vi. 72 ; P. jR. iv. 

584. 
upborn, P. X. ii. 408, xi. 147. 
upbraid, P. X. vi. 182 ; S. ^. 

820. 
upbraided, P. X. iv. 45, ix. 

1168. 
updrawn, P. X. iv. 228. 
updrew, P. X. ii. 874. 
upflew, P. X. iv. 1004. 
upgrew, P. X. iv. 137- 
upgrown, P. X. ix. 677 ; P. #* 

i. 140. 
upheave, P. X. vii. 286. 
upheav'd, P. X. vii. 471. 
upheld, P. X. i. 133, 639, »i« 

178, ISO, v. 336; Sow.xvii.7. 
uphold, S. A. 666, 892. 
upland, UAL 92. 
upled, P. X. vii. 12. 
uplift, P. X. i. 193. 
uplifted, P. X. i. 347, ii. 7, 

929, vi. 317, vii. 219, xi. 

746, 863 ; OdSoL Muf. 11. 
uplifting, P. X. vi. 646. 
upper, P. X. i. 346, x. 422, 

446. 
upraife, P. X. ii. 372. 
uprais'd, P. X. x. 946. 
uprear'd, P. X. i. 532. 



upright, P. X. i. 18, 221, ii. 
72, iv. 837, vi. 82, 270, 627, 
vii. 509, 632, viii. 260 ; 
P. R. iv. 551 ; Com. 52 ; Pf. 
i. 15, vii. 29, 42. 
uprightnefs, P. X. iii. 693. 
uprifen, P. X. v. 139. 
uproar, P. X. ii. 541, iii. 710, 

vi. 668, x. 479. 
uproll'd, P.L. vii. 291. 
uprooted, P. X. vi. 781. 
uprofe, P. X. ii. 108, vi. 525, 

vii. 456. 
upfent, P. X.i. 541. 
upfpringing, P. X. v. 250. 
upfprung, P. X. iv. 143, vii. 

462. 
upfland, Pf. ii. 2. 
upftart, P. X. ii. 834, xii. 88. 
upftay'd, P. X. vi. 195. 
upftays, P. X. ix. 430. 
upftood, P. X. vi. 446, vii. 

321. 
uptore, P. X. vi. 663. 
upturn, P. X. x. 700. 
upturn'd, P. X. x. 279. 
upturns, P. X. x. 701. 
upward, P. X. i. 462, ii. 101S # 

iii. 61 8, 717, vi. 649; Com. 

98 ; Pf. lxxx. 47. 
upwhirl'd, P. X. iii. 493. 
Ur, P. X. xii. 130. 
Urania, P. X. vii. 1, 31. 
urchin, Com. 845. 
urge, P. X. viii. 114; Pf. vii. 

21. 
urg'd, P. X. ii. 120, vi. 622, 

864, ix. 588, xi. 109 ; P. R* 

i. 469; 5. ^.223,755,852, 

1677. 
urges, P. X. i. 68, ix. 250. 
Uriel, P. X. iii. 648, 654, 690, 

iv. 125, 555, 577, 58Q, vi. 

363, ix. 60. 
Urim, P. X. vi.76l. 
urn, Lye. 20. 
urns, P. X. vii. 365 ; Ocf Nat, 

192. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



us, P. X. v. 721, 729, vii. 142, 

519, x. 490, xi. 67, 84. 
ufage, S. A. 1108; Com. 681. 
ufe, P. X. iv. 204, 692, v. 323, 

vii. 346, viii. 29, 192, ix. 

750. 
ufe, (verb) P. X. ix. 718, x. 

1078 ; P. P. iii. 394 ; S. A. 

1139, 1499; Lye. 67, 136; 

Fac. .Ear. 8. 
us'd, P. X. iii. 196, iv. 199, 

346, 762, 975, v. 386, viii. 

434, 525, ix. 2,519, x. 552; 

P. P. iii. 356; S. ^. 1203; 

Com. 821. 
ufeful, P. X. ii. 259, viii. 200 ; 

S. A. 564. 
ufelefs, P. X. iii. 109, viii. 25; 

S. A. 1282, 1501; Sen. 

xix. 4. 
ufes, P. X. viii. 106. 
ufeft, P.X.vii.8l6. 
ufher, P. X. iv. 355, x. 94. 
ufher'd, 1/ Pew/. 127. 
ufurp, P. X. xi. 827, xii. 421. 
ufurpation, P. X. ii. 983; S. ^. 

1060. 
ufurp'd, P. X. x. 189, xii. 66; 
■ P. P. iii. J69, iv. 183. 
ufurped, Od. Nat. 170. 
ufurper, P. X. xii. 72. 
ufurping, P.X. i.514, ix. 1130; 

Com. 237. 
utenfils, P. R. iii. 336. 
Uther's, P. X. i. 580. 
utmoft, P. X. i. 74, 103, 399, 

521, ii. 95, 301, 1029, iv. 

539y v. 517, vi. 293, ix. 314, 

59h x. 30, 437, 1020, xi. 

332,397, xii. 376; P.P. i. 

94, ii. 148, iv. 75; 6'. A. 

1153, 1514; Com. 136, 6l7; 

Pf. ii. 19, lxxxvii. 15. 
Utter, (verb) P. X. i. 626, ii. 

87, v. 683, ix. 131, xi.704; 

P. /{. iv. 172; S.A. 1566. 
Utter, P. X. i. 72, ii. 127, 440, 

iii. 16,308, v. 614, vi. 716. 



utterance, P. X. iii. 62, iv. 410, 

ix. 1066 ; P. R. iii. 10. 
utter'd, P.L. ix. 33, x. 615; 

P. Jt. i. 320; S. A. 1645; 

Com. 786. 
utterd'ft, P. X. xi. 762. 
uttering, P. L. iii. 143, 347. 
uttermoit, P. X. vii. 266, x. 

920. 
uxorious, P. L. i. 444; 5. A. 

945. 
Uzzean, P. P. i. 369. 
Uzziel, P. X. iv. 782. 



vacant, P. J,, ii. 835, vii. 190, 
xi. 103; P. P. ii. 116; S.A. 
89 ; Com. 718 ; Od. Hor. 10, 
vacation, Ep. Hobf. II. 14. 
vacuity, P. X. ii. 932. 
vacuous, P. L. vii. 169. 
vagabond, P. X. xi. l6. 
vagaries, P. X. vi. 6l4. 
vain, P. X. i. 44, ii. 9, 19T, 
234, 378, 565, 933, iii. 109, 
446, 448, 465, 467, iv. 87, 
466, 808, 860, v. 737, 
vi. 90, 135, vii. 610, 187, ix. 
1113, 1189, x. 50, 337, 829, 
xi. 92; P. P. iii. 105, 387, 
425, iv. 20, 24, 307 ; S. A. 
322, 350, 570, 1227, 1504; 
Lye. 18; II Pen/. 1; Com. 
513; Son. xxii. 13; Od. on, 
Time5',Pf. ii.2,iv*12. 
in vain, P. X. iii. 23, 457, 
601, 602, iv. 67 5, 833, v. 
43, ix. 296, x. 515, xi. 
726, xii. 377; P. P. i. 459, 
ii. 24, 388, iv. 407, 498; 
S. A. 841, 914; Son. xv. 
13; Od. Nat. 204, 208, 
219. 
vain-glorious, 7\ X. vi. 384, 
vainly, P. L. ii. 811. 
Valdarno, P. L. i. 290. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vale, P. X. i. 224, ii. 6l8, 742, 

vi. 70, x. 530, xi. 567, xii. 

266; P. R. i. 304; S. A. 

181, 229; Com. 233; Pf. 

lxxxiv. 21. 
vales, P. X. i. 321, iii. 569; 

Son. xviii. 9« 
valiant, P. It, iv. 143 ; S. A. 

1101, 1738. 
valid, P. L. vi. 438. 
valley, P. X. i. 404, ii. 4p5, 

547, iv. 255, v. 203, vi. 784, 

ix. 11$, xi. 349; P. ii. ii. 

185, iv. 586; Com. 282. 
valleys, P. X. vii. 327; P. R. 

iii. 332 ; Lye. 136. 
Vallombrofa, P. X. i. 303. 
valour, P. X. i. 554, iv. 297, 

vi. 457, xi. 690 ; P. R. ii. 

431;^.^. 1010, 1165, 1740. 
value, P. X. iv. 202, viii. 571 ; 

S, A. 1029. 
valued, P. X. ii. 679. 
valuefr, P. R. iv. 156. 
van, P. X. ii. 535, v. 589, vi. 

107; #.^.1234. 
Vane, Son. xvii. 1 . 
vanguard, P. X, vi. 558. 
vanifh, P. X. iv. 368. 
vanifiYd, P, X. vi. 14 ; P. R. ii. 

402. 
vanity, P. X. iii. 447, x. 875, 

P. II. iv. 138 ; Od. Nat. 136 ; 

P/. iv. 10, vii. 51. 
vanquifh, P. R. i. 175. 
vanquiuYd, P. X. i. 52, 476, iii. 

243, vi. 365,410; S. A. 235, 

281, 562. 
vanquifher, P. X. iii. 251. 
vanquishing, P. R, iv. 607. 
vans, P. X. ii. 927. 
vapour, P. X. ii. 2l6, ix. 159, 

635, 1047, x. 694, xi. 741. 
vapours, P. X. iii. 445, iv. 557, 

v. 5, 420, xii. 635 ; Arc. 49. 
variable, P. X. xi. 92. 
varied, P. X. v. 431, ix. 51 6. 
variety, P. X. vi. 640, vii. 542, 



various, P. X. i. 374, 375, 706, 

ii. 967, iii. 582, 604, 717, iv. 

247, 423, 669, v. 89, 146, 

390, 473, vi. 84, 242, vii. 

318, viii. 125, 370, 609, ix. 

6 19, x. 343, 1064, xi, 557, 

xii. 53, 282 ; P. R. ii. 240, 

iv. 68; S.^. 71,668; Com. 

22. 
various-meafur'd, P. R. iv. 256, 
varioufly, P. X. viii. 6l0. 
varnifh, P. R. iv. 344. 
varninYd, S. A. 901. 
varninYd o'er, P. X. ii. 485. 
vary, P. X. v. 184. 
vaffal, P. it. iv. 133. 
vaflalage, P. X. ii. 252. 
vaffals, P. X. ii. 90. 
vaft, P. X. i. 21, 177, ii. 254, 

409, 539, 652, 832, 932, iii. 

711, iv. 777, 267, vi. 109, 

203, 256, vii. 211, 229, viii. 

24, 153, x. 471,601; P. JR. 

i. 153, iii. 286; S. A. 54, 

1238 ; Pf. iv. 6. 
vaftnefs, P. X. vii. 472. 
vault, P. X. i. 669, iv. 777. 
vaulted, P. X. i. 298, vi. 214; 

S.A. 1606. 
vaults, Com. 47 1. 
vaunted, P. X. iii. 251 ; Com. 

738. 
vaunting, P. X. i. 126, vi. 363; 

S. A. 1360. 
vaunts, P. X. iv. 84; P. H. i. 

145. 
veers, P. X. ix. 515. 
vegetable, P. X. iv. 220. 
vehemence, P. X. ii. 954; Com, 

795. 
vehement, P. X. viii. 526, x. 

1007. 
veil, P. X. iv. 304, V. 383, 646, 

ix. 1054; S. A. 730; Od. 

Nat. 42. 
veil, (verb) P. X. iii. 382, vi. 1 1. 
veil'd, P. X. iii. 26, v. 250, ix. 

52, 425 ; Son* xxiii. 10. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



veils, P. X. xi. 229. 

vein, P. X. vi. 6*28 ; Od. Nat. 

15. 
veins, P. X. i. 701, iv. 227, vi. 

516, ix. 891, xi. 568. 
velvet, Com. 898. 
venereal, S. A. 533. 
vengeance, P. X. i. 170, 220, 
ii. 173, iii. 399, iv. 170, vi. 
279, 808, xii. 541 ; Com. 
218. 
vengeful, P. X. i. 148, x. 1023 ; 

Od. Cir. 24. 
venial, P. X. ix. 5. 
venom, P. X. iv. 804. 
venom'd, Com.916. 
vent, P. X. vi. 583, xii. 374; 

P. P. i. 433, iv. 445. 
vented, P. JR. iii. 391. 
ventur'd, P. X. iv. 574. 
venture, P. L. iii. 19, iv. 891 ; 

Com. 228. 
ventures, P. P. i. 177. 
venturing, P. X. ix. 69O; S. A. 

1373. 
venturous, P. X. ii. 205, v. 64; 

Coin. 609. 
Venus, P. P. ii. 214 ; L'Al. 14; 

Com. 124. 
verbal, P. P. iii. 104. 
verdant, P. X. iv. 697, vii. 310, 
viii. 631, ix. 501, 1038; 
P. P. iii. 253 ; Cow. 622. 
verdia, S. A. 324, 1228. 
verdure, P. X. vii. 315, xi. 

832. 
verdurous, P. X. iv. 143. 
verge, P. X. ii. 1038, vi. 865, 

xi. 881. 
verify, P. P. i. 133, iii. 177. 
verified, P. X. x. 182. 
vcrmeil-tinctur'd, CW?. 752. 
vermin, S. A. 574>. 
vernal, P. X. iii. 43, iv. 155, 
264 ; S. A. 628 ; Lye. 141 ; 
Ep. M. Win. 40. 
ternant, P. X. x. 679* 



verfe, P. X. v. 150, ix. 24 J 

Cow. 516; Sow. xiii.9; Od. 

Nat. 17; Od. Paf. 22, 47; 

Od. Sol. Muf. 2. 
Vertumnus, P. X. ix. 395. 
very, Pf. vi. 4. 
vefiel, P. X. ii. 1043, ix. 89, xi. 

729, 745, xii. 559; S. A. 
199;P/".21. 
veffels, P. X. v. 348. 
veil, P. X. xi. 241. 
Vefta, II Pen/. 23. 
veiled, P. P. i. 267; Sow. 

xxiii.9. 
venture's, Arc. 83. 
vex, P. X. ii. 801. 
vex'd, P. X. i. 306, ii. 660, iii. 

429, x. 314; P.P. iv. 416; 

Com. 666. 
viands, P. X. v. 434; P. P. ii. 

370. 
vial'd, Com. 847. 
vice, P. X. i. 492, ii. 116, xi. 

518; Com. 760. 
vicegerent, P. X. x. 56. 
vicegerent's, P. X. v. 609. 
vices, P. P. iii. 86, iv. 340; 

S. A. 269. 
vicious, P. X. xii. 104. 
viciflitude, P. X. vi. 8, vii. 

351. 
vidor, P. X. i. 95, 169, ii. 144, 

vi. 124, 410, 525, 590, 880, 

x. 376; P. P. iv. 102, 571, 

637; S. A. 1290. 
victories, Son. xvi. 10. 
victorious, P. X. ii. 142, 997, 

iii. 250, vi. 886, vii. 136, x. 

634; P.R.i.9 t 215; S. A. 

1663; Com. 974; Od. Sol. 

Muf 14. 
victor's, P. X. ii. 199, xii. 385, 

433. 
victors', P. P. iv. 337. 
vi&ors, P. X. vi. 609. 
viaory, P. X. ii. 105, 770, vi. 

201,240,630,762, xii. 452, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



$70; P.R.'u 173, iy. 594; 

Son. x. 6, xv. 6. 
?iew, P. X. i. 27, 563, ii. 190, 

394, 890, iii. 542, iv. 27, 

142, 247, 399, vi. 18, 81, 

603, vii. 6l8, x. 1030, xi. 

761; P. R. iv. 514; S. A. 

723; Son. xxii. 2; P/. 

Ixxx. 9. 
view, (verb) P. X. iii. 59, ix. 

482; P. P. iv. 250; 6'. A. 

1491. 
view'd, P. X. ii. 6l7, vii. 211, 

549; P. ii. ii- 131, 198,297, 

iii. 233. 
viewing, P. X. ii. 764, ix. 1052, 

x. 235. 
viewlefs, P. X. iii. 518; Com. 

92 ; Od. Faff. 50. 
views, P. X. i. 59, 288, 569, 

ii. 190, iii. 56l, iv. 205. 
view'fl, P. X. x. 355. 
vigilance, P. X. iv. 580, ix. 157, 

x. 30. 
vigils, P.P. i. 182. 
vigorous, S. A. 1704. 
vigour, P. X. i. 140, ii. 13, vi. 
158,436, 851, viii. 97, 269, 

ix. 314, x. 405 ; S. A. 1280. 
vile, P. X. ii. 194, v. 782, x. 

971, xii. 510; S. A. 376, 

377, 1361 ; Com. 907. 
vileft, S. A. 73, 74. 
vilified, P. X. xi. 5l6. 
village, P. R. i. 332; Com. 

346. 
villager, Com. 166, 304, 576. 
villages, P. X. ix. 448. 
villatick, S. A. 1695. 
vindicate, P. JR. ii. 47 ; S. A. 

475. 
vine, P. X. iv. 258, 307, v. 215, 
427, vii. 320; UAL 47; Com. 
294 ; P/. lxxv. 33, 36, 60, 
6l. 
vines, P. X. i. 410, v. 635, 
mintage, P. ii. iv. 15. 



viol, Od. Pqf. 28. 

violate, P. X. iv. 883, ix. 903 5 

S. A. 428. 
violated, P. X. x. 25 ; P. JR. iii. 

160. 
violating, S. A. 893. 
violence, P. X. i. 496, iv. 901* 

995, v. 242, 905, vi. 35, 274, 

371, 405, ix. 282, x. 1041, 

xi. 671, 780, 812, 888; 

P. R. r. 219, 389, iii. 90, 

191, iv. 388; S. A. 1191; 

Son. xv. 11; Pf. vii. 59, 

lxxv. 52. 
violent, P. X. ii. 782, iii. 487, 

iv. 97, ix. 324, xi. 471, 669, 

xii. 93; P. R. iii. 87; Pf. 

Ixxxvi. 50. 

more violent, P. X. vi. 439/ 
xi. 428. 
violet, P. X. iv. 700; Lye. 

145. 
violet-embroider'd, Com. 233. 
violets, P. X. ix. 1040 ; V Al. 

21. 
viper, S. A. 1001. 
virgin, P. X. ix. 396, 452, x, 

676, xii. 368, 379; P.P. i. 

134, 138, 239; S.A. 1035; 

7/ Pe»/. 103; Com. 148, 

350, 427, 448, 507, 582, 

689, 826, 856, 905; Son. 

ix. 14 ; Od. Nat. 3, 327; Od. 

D. F. I. 21; Ep. M. Win. 

17. 
virgin-born, P. R. iv. 500. 
virgin fancies, P. X. v. 297. 
virgin majefty, P. X. ix. 270. 
virgin modefty, P. X. viii. 501, 
virgin feed, P. X. iii. 284. 
virginity, Com. 437, 738, 787. 
virgins, P. X. i. 441 ; S. A. 

1741. 
virtual, P. X. viii. 6l7, xi. 

338. 
virtue, P. X. i. 320, ii. 483, 

551, iii. 5S6 9 iv. 198, 671, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



848, v. 371, vi. 117, 703, vii. 
236, viii. 95, 124, 502, ix. 
110, 145,310, 317,335, 374, 
6l6, 649, 6'94, 778, 973, 
1063, x. 372, 884, xi. 623, 
690, 790, 798, xii. 98, 583 ; 
P.R. i. 68, 165, 177, 231, 
483, ii. 248, 431, 455, 464, iii. 
348, iv. 297, 298, 301, 314, 
850; S. A. 173, 756, 870, 
1010, 1039, 1050, 169O, 
1697; Com. 9, 165, 373, 
761, 1019, 1022; So?i. xv. 
5. 

virtue-proof, P. L. v. 384. 

virtues, P. L. ii. 15, 311, v. 
601, 772, 840, vii. 199, ix. 
745, x. 460 ; P.R. ii. 217, 
iii. 21, iv. 98; Son. ix. 7 \ 
Ep. M. Win. 4. 

virtue's, Com. 367. 

virtuous, P. L. iii. 608, ix. 795, 
1033 ; P. ii. i. 382, ii. 468, 
iv. 301; S. A. 1047; UPenf. 
113; Com. 211, 621 ;Son. xx. 
1 ; Ep. M. Win. 60. 

virtuoufeft, P. L. viii. 550. 

vifage, P. X. ii. 989, iii- 646, 
iv. 116, v. 419, vi. 26l, x. 
511; Lye. 62 ; II Pen/. 13 ; 
Com. 527. 

vifages, P. i. i. 570, x. 24. 

Vifcount's, Ep. M. Win. 3. 

viable, P. L. i. 63, iii. 3S6, vi. 
145, vii. 22, ix. 604, xi. 321. 

vifibly, P. L. iii. 141, iv. 850, 
vi. 682; Com. 21 6. 

virion, P. L. i. 455, 684, v. 
&3, viii. 356, 367,^.599, 
xii. 121 ; P. It. i. 256, iv. 
41 ; Lye. l6l ; Co?/». 457. 

vifions, P. L. xi. 377, 763. 

\ifit, P. L. iii. 32, 230, 532, 
66l, v. 375, vii. 570, viii. 45, 
xii. 48; S. A. 1742 ;0d. D. 
F. I. 52; Pf. lxxx. 6'0, 
61. 

vifitant, P. L. xi. 225, 



vifitants, S. A. 56f. 

vilitation, P. L. ix. 22, xi. 275« 

vifited, P. L. x. 955. 

vifiting, P. L iv. 240. 

vifits, Com. 844. 

vifit'ft, P. i. vii. 29 ; Pf. viii. 
14. 

vifor'd, Com. 698. 

vifual, P. L. iii. 620, xi. 415; 
S. A. 163. 

vital, P. L. iii. 22, v. 484, vi. 
345, vii. 236; ^rc. 65. 

vitiated, P. X. x. 169; S. A. 
389. 

vocal, P. i. v. 204, ix. 198, 
530 ; Lye. 86 ; Com. 247. 

voice, P. L. i. 274, 337, ii, 
188, 474, 518, iii. 9, 370, 
710, iv. 1,36, 467, v. 15,37, 
705, vi. 27, 56, 782, vii. 2, 
24, 37, 100, 221, 513, 598, 
viii. 2, 436, 486, ix. 199, 
551, 561, 653, 871, 1069, 
x. 33, 97, 116, 119, 146, 
198, 615, 729, 779, xi. 321, 
xii, 235, 265; P. R. i. 31, 
35, 84, 172, 275, 283, 490, 
ii. 314, iv. 256, 512, 539, 
627; S. A. 1065; Lye. 132; 
Arc. 77; Com. 492, 563; 
Od. Nat. 27, 96, 174, 183; 
Od. Sol. Muf. 2 ; Pf. iv. IS, 
v. 3, 5, vi. 17, lxxxi. 46, 
Ixxxv. 21, lxxxvi. 12. 

voices, P. L. i. 712, ii. 952, iii. 
347, iv. 682, v. 197. 

void, P. L. i. 181, ii. 219, 238, 
829, iii- 12, iv. 97, vi. 415, 
vii. 233, ix. 1074, x. 50, xi. 
790, xii. 427; P. ii. iv. 189s 
Brut. 10. 

volant, P. L. xi. 56l. 

volatile, P. L. iii. 603. 

volies, P. L. vi. 213. 

vollied, P. L. iv. 928. 

volubil, P. L. iv. 594. 

voluble, P. L. ix. 436; S. A, 
1307. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



voluminous, P. P. ii. 652; 

P. P. iv. 384. 
voluntary, P. P. iii. 37, v. 529, 

x. 6l; P. P. ii. 394. 
voluptuous, P. P. ii. 869; P. P. 

ii. 165 ; S. A. 584. 
votarift, Com. 189. 
vote, P. P. ii. 313, 389; P. P. 

ii. 129. 
vwuch'd, P. P. v. 66*. 
vouchfafe, P. P. v. 312, 365, 

vi. 823; P. P. ii. 210; P/. 

lxxx. 14, 30, 78. 
youchfaf'd, P. P. iii. 332, iii. 

175, v. 463, 8S4, vii. 80, 

viii. 8, 581, xi. 318, xii. 622; 

P. P. i. 490. 
vouchfafes, P. P. xi. 877, xii. 

120, 246. 
vouchfafTt, P. P. xi. 70. 
vow, S. A. 319, 379, 1386; 

Ep. Hobf. II. 19. 
vow'd, Od. Hor. 13; Pntf. 6. 
vowing, P. P. i. 490. 
vows, P. P. i. 441, iv. 97, xi. 

493; £. ^f. 520, 750; Arc. 6. 

Pore, of Con. 2. 
voyage, P. P. ii. 426, 919, vii. 

431, viii. 230; P. P. i. 103. 
voyag'd, P. P.x.471. 
Vulcan, Com. 655. 
vulgar, P. P. iii. 577; P. P. 

iii. 51 ; 5. A. 1659. 
vulture, P. P. iii. 432. 



W. 

wades, P. P. ii. 950. 
waft, P. P. i. 104; Py£. 164. 
wafted, P. P. iii. 52 U 
wafting, P. P. xii. 435. 
wafts, P. X. ii. 1042. 
wage, P.P. i. 121. 
wag'd, P. P. ii. 534. 
waggons, P. L. iii. 439; P- P. 
iii. 336. 



wail, 5. A. 66, 1721. 

wailing, 5. A. 806. 

wain, Cow. 190; Ep. Hobf. II. 

32. 
wait, P. P. ix. 55, 505, iii, 

485, viii. 554 ; P. P. ii. 49. 

102, iii. 373; Arc. 107; 

CW. 921 ; Son. xix. 14. 

in wait, P. P. iv. 825. 
waited, P. P. viii. 6l, ix. 409 ; 

P. P. i. 269. 
waiting, P. P. i. 604, ii. 223, 

iv. 471, ix. 191, 839. 
waits, P. L. v. 354; Pf. vii. 

48. 
wake, P. P. iii. 686, iv. 678, 

734,; S. A. 952; II Pen/. 

151 ; Com. 317. Pf. vii. 22. 
wak'd, P. P. v. 3, 26, 92, 657, 

vi. 3, viii. 309, 478, ix. 739, 

106l, x. 94, xi. 65, 135, xii. 

608; P. P. ii 284; &w. 

xxiii. 14 ; Pf. iii. 13 
wakeful, P. P. ii. 463, 946, iii. 

38, iv. 602, xi. 131 ; Od. Nat. 

156. 
waken, P. L. iii. 369, xii. 594* 
wakens, Com. 124. 
wakes, (fubft.) Com. 121. 
wakes, P. P. iv. 23, 24, v. 44, 

110; Com. 124. 
waking, P. P. iii. 515, v. 14, 

121,678; P.P.i.311;Cow. 

263. 
wak'ft, P. P. xi. 368. 
walk, (fubft.) P. P. ii. 1007, 

iv. 627, 655, v. 49, vi. 647, 

ix. 434; P. P. i. 311, u. 

153, 261. 
walk, P. P. iv. 528, 677, 685, 

v. 36, 200, ix. 246, xi. 707, 

xii. 562; P. P. i. 478; 

£. ^. 1530; II Penf. 65 ; 

-Sort. xi. 7; P/'. Ixxxi. 56. 
walk on, Pf Ixxxii. IS. 
walk'd, P. P. i. 295, iii. 430, 

441, vii. 443, 459, 503, viii. 

264, ix. 114, xi. 581 ; 6'. A, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



343, 530, 1089; Lyt. 173 ; 

Son. xi. 3 ; Pf i. 1. 
walking, P. L. x. 98 ; P. il. iv. 

447 ; L'Al. 57. 
walks, (fubtt.) P. X. iv. 586, 

viii* 305, 528, ix. 1107, xi. 

179, 270; II Pen/. 133 ; Com. 

314. 
walks, P. L. iii. 422, 683, v. 

351, xii. 49; Com. 211, 384, 

432. 
walk'ft, Brut. 2. 
wall, P. L. iii. 71, 427, 503, iv. 

143, 146, 182, 697, vi. 860, 

vii. 293, ix. 16, x. 302, xi. 

657 ; P. it. iii. 275 ; Od. 

D. F. I. 47 ; Od. Hor. 14. 
wali'd, P. #. ii. 22. 
wallowing, P. L. vii. 411. 
walls, P. L. ii. 343, 1035, x. 

423, xi. 387, xii. 197, 342 ; 

P.R. iv. 250; Son. viii. 14; 

Pf. cxxxvi. 49. 
walls, (verb) P. L. iii. 721. 
wan, P. L. iv. 870, x. 412 ; 

Lye. 147 ; Son. xiii. 6. 
wand, P. L. i. 294, iii. 644 ; 

Com. 614, 653, 659, 815; 

Od.Nat. 51. 
wander, P. L. i. 501, ii. 148, 

iii. 27, 458, vii. 20, 330, xi. 

282; Lye. 185; Com. 351. 
wander'd, P. L. iii. 499; P. R. 

i. 354; Od. D.F.I. 17. 
wanderer, Cow. 524. 
wandering, P. L. i. 365, 481, 

ii. 404, 523,830,973, iii.631, 

667, iv. 234, 531, v. 177, vii. 

50, 302, viii. 126, 187, 312, 

ix. 634, 1136, 1146, x. 875, 

xi. 779, xii. 133, 334,648; 

P. JR. ii. 246, 313, iv. 600; 

S. A. 302, 675; II Pen/. 67 ; 

Com. 39, 193, 1006; Vac. 

Ex. 53 ; Pf. lxxxi. 50. 
vvannifh, Od. Faff. 35. 
want, (fubft.) P. L. ii. 806, ix. 

755; P. Ii. I 331, ii. 331, 



431; 5.^.289, 905; Com. 

369, 768. 
want, P. L. i.715, ii. 272, 341, 

iv. 676, v. 365, 514, xii. 

396; 5.^.916. 
wanted, P. L. iv. 338, 989, v. 

147, vii. 505, viii. 355, ix* 

601; P.R. iii. 327; S. A. 

315; Com. 689. 
wanting, P. L. i. 556, ix. 199, 

x. 271 : P. R. ii. 450', S. A. 

1484. 
wanton, P. L. i. 414, 454, iv. 

306, 629, 768, ix. 211, xi. 

583; P. R. ii. 180; Lye. 

137 ; L'A1.27, 141; Arc.47 ; 

Com. 176 ; Od.Nat. 36; Od. 

£>. P. J. 14. 
wanton'd, P. Z. v. 295. 
wantonly, P. X. ix. 1015. 
wantonnefs, P. L. xi. 795. 
wants, P. L. ii. 271, iv. 730, v. 

348, vii. 98, viii. 296, ix. 

821, x. 869. 
war, P.L. i.43, 121,129, 150, 

645, 661,668, ii. 9, 41,51, 

119,121,160,179,187,230, 

283, 329, 330, 533, 711, 767, 

iv. 817, vi. 19,236,242,259, 

274, 312, 339, 377, 408, 506, 

667,695,702,712,897, vii. 

55, x. 374, xi. 219, 220, 641, 

713,780,784, 797, xii. 31, 

214, 218; P.R. iii. 17, 90, 

336,388,401 ; S. A. 1278; 

Son., xv. 10, xvi.2, 11, xvii. 

7 ; Od. Nat. 53 ; Vac. Ex. 86. 
war, (verb) P. L. ii. 230, vi. 

92, x. 710. 
warble, P. L. v. 195 ; L'Al. 

1 34 ; Son. xx. 12 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 

89- 
warbled, P. L. ii. 242 ; 11 Pcnf. 

106; Arc. 87; Com. 854. 
warbleft, Son. i. 2. 
warbling, P. L. iii. 31, v. 196, 

vii. 436, viii. 265 ; S. A. 934 ; 

Lye. 189- 



VERBAL INDEX. 



wardrpbe, Vac. Ex. 18. 

wards, P. L. ii. 877- 

ware, P. L. ix. 353 ; Com. 

558. 
warfare, P. X. vi. 803 ; P. R. 

i. 158. 
warlike, P. X. i. 531, iv. 780, 

902, vi.257; P.P. iii. 308; 

5. A. 137. 
warm, P. X. vii. 279? viii. 4,66 ; 

P.P.i. 318; Od.May-M.6. 
warm, (verb) P. X. iv. 669, v. 

301. 
warm'd, P. X. ix. 721, xi. 338. 
warmly, P. X. iv. 244. 
warms, P. X. iii. 583; £orc. 

viii. 8. 
warmth, P. _L. ii. 601, v. 302, 

vii. 236, viii. 37, x. 1008 ; 

P. R. ii. 74. 
warn, P. X. ii. 533, v. 237, vi. 

908, viii. 327, x. 871, xi. 

195, 777 ; P. R. iv. 483. 
warn'd, P. X. iii. 185, iv. 6, 

125, 467, vi. 547, viii. 190, 

ix. 253, 363, 371, 1171; 

P.P. i. 26, 255; S. ^. 382; 

Orf. Nat. 74. 
warning, P. X. iv. 1. 
warping, P. X. i. 341. 
warrant, S. A. 1426. 
warranted, Com. 327* 
warr'd, P. X. i. 198, 576. 
warring, P. X. ii. 905, iii. 396, 

iv. 41, v. 566, vi. 225. 
warriour, P. X. iv. 576, 946, 

vi. 233; S. A. 542, 11 66. 
warriours, P. X. i. 3l6, 565, vi. 

537, xi. 101, 662; S.A. 139; 

Od. Cir. 1. 
wars, P. X. ii. 501, 897, ix. 28. 
wary, P. X. ii. 917, v. 459- 
wain, P. X. iii. 31 ; Lye. 155. 
warn off, P. P. i. 73; S.A. 

1727. 
waih'd, P. X. x. 215, xi. 569 ; 

P. P.iv. 28$ I' Al. 22', Od. 

Paff. 35. 

VOL. I, 



wafhing, P. X. xii. 443 ; S. A* 

1107. 
wafhy, P. X. vii. 303. 
waffailers, Cow. 179. 
wafte, P. X. ii. 650, 1045, iv. 

304, 538, v. 281, vi. 36l, ix. 

1113, xi. 791; P. R. i. 7, 

354, iii. 283, iv. 123 ; Com. 

403, 729, 942 ; Son. xii. 14. 
wafte, (adjed.) P. X. i. 60, iii. 

424, x. 282,434; P. R. iv. 

523. 
wafte, (verb) P.L. ii. 365, 695, 

x. 617, 820, xi. 784 ; Son. 

xx. 4. 
wafted, P. X. xi. 567 ; P. P. iii. 

102, 302 • Pf. lxxxiii. 34. 
wafteful, P. X. ii. 961, vi. 862, 

vii. 212, x. 620; P. R. iv. 

46l ; Pf. exxxvi. 58. 
wafting, P. X. ii. 502 ; P. R. ii. 

256. 
watch, P. X. ii. 130, 462, iv. 

406, 562, 685, 783, v. 288, 

ix. 62, 68,363, 814, x. 427, 

438, 594, xii. 365 ; Com. 89, 

543; Od. Nat. 21. 
watch, (verb) P.L. i. 332, vii. 

106, 409, ix. 156. 
watch-tower, UAl. 43. 
watch'd, P. X. xi. 73 ; P. B. iv. 

408, 522. 
watches, P. X. vi. 412 ; Com, 

347. 
watches, (verb) P. X. ix. 257. 
watchful, P. X. v. 104, xi. 128; 

P.P. iii. 173; Com. 113; 

Od. Cm 3 ; Fac. £#. 40. 

more watchful, P. X. ix. 31 1. 
watching, P. X. ii. 413, iv. 185, 

826; P. P. i. 244; £..4.232. 
water, P. X. ii. 612, vii. 502, 

xi. 749; P.P. i. 81, ii. 124, 

iv. 412; Pf.vi. 13, lxxxi.31. 
water, (verb) P. X. xi. 279. 
water-nymphs, Com. 833. 
water'd, P. X. iv. 230, vii. 334 ; 

P. ft. iv. 277. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



watering, P. L. x. 1090, 1102. 
waters, P. L. iii. 11, iv. 260, 

454, v. 200, 872, vi. 196, 

645, vii. 262, 263, 268, 270, 

277, 283, 290, 308, 387, 393, 

397, 446", viii, 301, x. 285, 

xi. 79; S.J. 164,7 ; U Pen/. 

144; Com. 896, 993; Od. 

Nat. 65. 
watery, P. L. i. 397, ii. 584, 

iv. 46"1, 480, vii. 234, 297, 

viii. 346, xi. 779, 844, 882 ; 

Lye. 12, 167; Pf. i. 8, lxxxiv. 

23. 
wattled, Com. 344. 
wave, P.L. i. 193, ii. 1042, iii. 

539, vii. 298, 402, ix. 496, 

xi. 845 ; Com. 659, 86l, 887 ; 

Od.Nat. 68, 231. 
wave, (verb) P. L. v. 193, 194, 

687; UPtnf. 148. 
wav'd, P. L. i. 340, iv. 306, vi. 

304, vii. 406, 476, xii. 643. 
waver, S. A. 456. 
wavering, S. A. 732 ; Com. 11 6. 
waves, P. L. i. 184, 306, ii. 

581, vii. 214, 2l6, x. 311, 

xi. 747, 830, xii. 213; P. it. 

iv. 18; Lye 91, 173; Corn. 

258, 924; Od. Nat. 124; 

Vac. Ex. 44 ; Pf lxxxviii. 

31, 32, 68, exxxvi. 45. 
waves, (verb) P. L. iv. 764, xii. 

593. 
waving, P. L. i. 348, 546, iii. 

628, iv. 981, vi. 413, 580; 

S. A. 713, 1493; Com. 88; 

Od.Nat. 51. 
waxen, P. L. vii. 491 ; P/*. vi. 

14. 
waxing, P. L. iv. 969; Com. 

1000. 
way, P. L. i. 621, ii. 40, 62, 71, 

83, 134, 407, 432, 523, 683, 

782, 949, 958, 97'o, 1007, 
1016, 1026, iii. 87, 228, 437, 
564,735, iv. 126, 174, 177, 
66*7, 889, v. 508, 904, vi. 2, 



196, 780, vii. 158,298,302, 
426, 576, 579, viii. 183, 6l3, 
ix. 69, 410, 493, 496, 512, 
626, 640, 809, 847, 865, x. 
262, 267, 291, 310, 325, 397, 
473, xi. 15, 203, 223, 462, 
889, xii. 216, 649; P. R- i. 
104, 297, iv. 470, 638; S.A. 
481, 781, 823, 838, 1039, 
1091, 1332, 1530, 1591 ; It 
Penf. 70 ; Com. 36, 183, 305, 
539; Son. ix. 2, xviii. 13, 
xxi. 10 ; Pf. i. 2, 15, l6, ii. 
26, lxxxvi. 37. 
another way, Vac. Ex. 54. 
both way, P.P. iv. 70. 
every way, P. R. iii. 348. 
no way, P. L. iii. 618, x. 
844 ; P. R. iv. 206 ; S. A. 
739. 
one way, P. L. xi. 646 ; Od. 

Nat. 71. 
other way, P. L. x. 414, 894, 

xi. 527 ; P. P. i. 338. 
fome way, S. A. 1252. 
this way, P. L. iv. 867, v. 
310; S.A. 111,301; Com. 
170. 
which way, P. L. iv. 73, 75, 
982; P.P. i. 187, ii. 417; 
S. A. 756, 1015, 1541. 
way-lay, P. R. ii. 185. 
ways, P. L. i. 26, ii. 574, iii. 
46, 544, 680, iv. 620, 934, v. 
50, viii. 119,226, 373,413, 
433, ix. 682, x. 323, 6l0, 
643, 1005, xi. 468, 721, 812, 
xii. 110; P.R. i. 478; S.A. 
293, 300, 1407 ; Son. xx. 2 ; 
Ep. Hobf. I. 3 ; Pf. v. 24, 
Ixxx. 74, lxxxi. 56 y lxxxiv. 
20, 44, lxxxvi. 6. 
weak, P. L. i. 157, iv. 856, 
1012, viii. 532, ix. 1186, xi. 
540, xii. 291, 567; P. Jl.ii. 
221, iii. 4; Vac. Ex. 1; Ep. 
^.S/*.6;P/.vi.4,Uxxii,9, 
lxxxviii, 15, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

Weakening, P. X. ii. 1002. viii. 605, ix. 828, 1030; Od, 

weaker, P. X. vi. 909, ix. 383 ; Nat. 3 ; Otf. D. P. L li. 

II Pen/. 1 5. wedge, P. X. vii. 426, 

weakeft, P. X. vi. 117; 5. -4. 56. wedges, P. P. iii. 309* 

weakly, S. A. 50, 499- wedlock, 5. ^. 353. 

weaknefs, P. X. ii. 357, x. 801 ; wedlock-bands, S. A. 98& 

P. P. i. l6l, iii. 402 ; S. A. wedlock-bound, P. L. x. 90L 

5235, 756, 773, 778, 7S5, 829, wedlock-treachery, S. ^. 1009. 

830, 834, 843, 1722; Com. weed, Com. 189, Orf; D. P. X 

582. 58. 

weal, P. X. viii. 638, ix. 133. weeds, P. X. iii. 479; P- •& i<* 

wealth, P. X. i. 722, ii. 2, iv. 314; 5. A. 122 ; X'^/. 120; 

207, xi. 788 xii. 133, 332, Com. 16, 84, 390; Od. Hon 

352 ; P. P. ii. 202, 427, 430, 1 5. 

436, iii. 44, iv. 82, 141, 305, weekly, Ep. Hobf. I. 10, 

368 ; Com. 504, 726; Son. ween, P. X. iv. 741. 

xii. 14; Dante II. 4. ween'd, P. X. vi. 86* 

wealthy, Dawte I. 3. weening, P. X. vi. 795. 

weanling, P. X. iii. 434. weep, Pi X. i. 620, ix. il21j 

weapon, S. A. 142, 263. xi. 627 ; Lye. 165, 182 ; Pf 

weaponlefs, S. A. 130. lxxxviii. 3. 

weapons, P. X. vi. 439, ^97, weeping, P. X. x. 937 5 Oc?. 

839; Com. 612. J\ 7 a£. 183 ; Od. Faff* 51 ; Pf> 

wear, P. X. iv. 740; Com. 26, vi. 17. 

722 ; Od. Sol. Muf 14 ; Pf. weeps* & A. 728. 

ii. 7. weigh, P. X. viii. 570$ xi. 545 J 

wear out, S. A. 762. Pf. v. 2. 

wearers, P. X. iii. 490, weighed, P. X. iv. 990, 1012 ; 

wearied, P. X. i. 320, iii. 73, P- R. iii. 51, iv. 8; S. A. 

vi. 695, ix. 1045, xii. 107, 76S. 

614 ; P. R. iv. 591 ; S. A, weighs, P. X. ii. 1046j iii. 482i 

1583 ; Pf. vi. 11. weigh'ft, P. R. ii. 173. 

wearied out, S. A. 405 ; Com. weight, P. X. i. 227* ii; 307* 

182. 41 6, iv. 615, vi. 621, 652, xj 

wearing, 0d, Nat. 123. $68, xii. 539; P- P. i. 26'7* 

weariforne, P. X. ii. 247 ; P. P. ii. 465, iv. 282 ; Com. 728 ; 

iv. 322. Ep. Hobf. II. 9, 26. 

wears, Lye. 147; -Ep* 3X. Win. weights, P. X. iv. 1002* 

43. welcome, P. X. x. 771, xii 140; 

weary, P. X. xi. 310, xii. 10; S. A. 260, 576 ; Caw. 102, 

5. ^. 596; Cow, 64, 280; 213; Od. Nat. 18; £/>. ilX 

Vac. Ex. 25. JPwt 71 ; Od. May-M. 9. 

weather-beaten, P. X. ii. 1043. welkin, P. X. ii. 538 ; Com. 

weave, Com. 716. 1015. 

weaver's, S. A. 1122. well, P. X. i. 334, ii. 390, iii. 

wed, P. X. v. 216; S. A. 216, 196, 276, 370, 555, iv. 426* 

220; Od. Sol. Muf. 3. 926, v. 3l6, 46" 1, 508, 793, 

wedded, P. X. iv. 750, v. 223> 88S, vi. 11, 2& 150, 4^. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



542, 543, 625, vii. 128,546. 
viii. 388, 440, 540, 568, 573, 
588, ix. 141,205,229,353, 
492, 826, 1035, x. 887, si. 
257,416,451,530,554,629, 
xii. 505 ; P. R. i. 47, 286, 
301, iii. 51, 66, 196, 26*1, 
267, iv.275; S. A. 289, 381, 
408, 413, 483, 655, 1207, 
1258,1353,1399,1556,1723; 
Lye. 15 ; Com. 210, 235, 488, 
620, 623; Com. 772; Son. 
xiii. 1, xx. 11. 
as well as, Com. 201. 
how well, S. A. 204 ; Lye. 

113. 
not well, P. L. v. 335, ix. 

945. 
fo well, P. L. iii. 639, viii. 
396, 548, ix. 1021, 1027; 
P.P. i. 114, iv. 337; Com. 
791 ; Son. x. 12. 
too well, P. L. i. 134; S.A. 

878, 879 ; Com. 563. 
yet well, P. L. x. 725. 

well-aim'd, P L. ix. 173. 

well-attir'd, Lye. 146. 

well-balanc'd, Orf. Nat. 122. 

well-being, J?. L. viii. 36*1. 

well-couch'd, P. P. i. 97 '• 

well done, P. L. vi. 29, xi. 256. 

well-feafted, 5. ^. 1419- 

well-govern'd, Com. 705. 

well known, P. L. iv. 581. 

well-lighted, Ep. M. Win. 20. 

well might, P. L. ix. 785. 

well-plac'd, Com. l6l. 

well pleas'd, P. L. iii. 841, iv. 
164, v. 617, vi. 728, x. 71, 
xii. 625. 

well pleafmg, P. L. x. 634. 

well-practis'd, Com. 310. 

well fcem'd, P. L. x. 154. 

well-ftoek'd, Com. 152. 

well-ftor'd, P.P. ix. 184. 

well-trod, LAI. 131. 

well us'd, P. L. iv. 200. 

w«ll-woven, P. R. i. 97. 



welter, Lye. 13. 

weltering, P. L. i. 78 ; Od. Nat. 

124. 
went, P. Iv. i. 651, ii. 49, iv. 

126, 223, 456, 739, 858, vi. 

782, 884, vii. 588, viii. 48, 

208, ix. 847, 1099; S.A. 

1617; Lye. 103; Son. viii. 

12; Ep. Hobf. II. 22; Pf. 

lxxx. 48. 
went'ft, P. R. iv. 21 6. 
went down, P. L. x. 414. 
went forth, P. P. vi. 12, 6"S6, 

viii. 44, 59. 
went on, P. P. iv. 484. 
went up, P. L. vii. 334; S. A. 

1190. 
went'ft, P. L. xii. 6l0. 
wept, P. L. iv. 24S, ix. 991, 

1003, xi. 495; P. P. iii. 41; 

Com. 257 ; Od. Cir. 9 ; Ep. 

M. Win. 56. 
weft, P. P. v. 339, vii. 376, viii. 

163, ix. 80, x. 6^5^ xii. 40; 

P.P.iii.2?2,iv.7l, 77,448; 

Com. 306; Brut. 7. 

full weft, P. P. iv. 784. 
weltering; Lye. 31. 
weltern, P. P. iv. 597, 862, x. 

92, xi. 205, xii. 141 ; Lye. 

191 ; Pf. lxxx. 45. 
weftward, P. P. iv. 237- 
weft-winds, Com. 989* 
wet, P, L. v. 190 ; P. P. i. 318, 

iv. 433, 486; Pf. viii. 21, 

lxxx. 24. 
wether, 6'. A. 53S ; CW 499. 
wetting, S. A. 730. 
whales, P. L. vii. 391. 
what d'ye call, Fore, of Con. 12. 
whate'er, P. L. i. 150, ii. 11)2, 

442, 733, 955, iv. 425, 744, 

891, v.414, vi. 489, vii. 475, 

viii. 273, 622, ix. 92, 695, 

898, x. 11, 141, 245, 60£, 

757 ; P. R. i. 83, 178 ; S. A. 

1034, 1156; Arc. 79- 
whatever, P. R. iii. 213, iv. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tfOO; S.A. 904>; Son. \iu. 8; 
Pf lxxxv. 50. 

whatsoever, P. L. iv. 587. 

wheat, Pf. lxxxi. 6*6. 

wheel, P. L. iii. 741, vi. 326, 
751, viii. 135; Lye. 31 ; Ep. 
Hobf. II. 9; P/ lxxxiii. 49. 

wheel, (verb) P. L. iv. 783, 
xii. 183. 

wheel'd, P. L. vii. 501 ; P. R. 
iii. 323. 

wheeling, P. L. iv. 785 ; Fac. 
E.r. 34. 

wheels, P. X. i. 311, ii. 532, 
iii. 394, iv. 975, v. 140, 621, 
vi. 210, 358, 573, 7H, 755, 
832, 846, vii. 224; P.P. ii. 
16 ; Com. 190 ; Od. P^! 36*. 

wheels, (verb) P. L. i. 786. 

whelm'd, P. L. vi. 141, 651. 

whelming, Lye. 157- 

whelp U, P.L. xL 751. 

whence, P. L. i. 75, ii. 213, 
267,272,380,395,639,681, 
1006, iii. 618, iv. 158, 295, 
407, 452, 96*3, v. 99, 237, 
419, 486, 643, 856, vi. 27, 
477, 678, 6*93, 879, vii. 59, 
512, viii. 200, ix. 1078,1 13 , 
x. 88, 115, xi. 98, 158,26*2, 
343, 558, xii. 167, 531,610; 
P.R. i.446, ii. 418, iii. 107, 
407, iv. 26, 571 ; S. A. 12 16, 
1752 ; Com. 202, 532 ; Son, 
xx. 10. 

from whence, P. R. i. 81 ; 
iii. 340; S. A. 1744; Pf. 
lxxxi. 16. 

whenever, P. L. ii. 809, x. 771. 

where, P.L. i. 6*5, 250, 256, 
379, 442, 496, ii. 88, 282, 
357, 594, 868, 893, 894, iii. 
27, 105, 358, 376, 689, 738, 
iv. 99, 451, 470, 509,578, v. 
$78, 6*54, 688, vi. 6, 111, 
115,117,250,338,531,747, 
758, vii. 35, 200, 298, 305, 
329,457,517, viii. 270, 284, 



ix. 1, 71, 76, 81, 181, 214, 
215, 217, 259, 267, 414, 417, 
425, 442, 446, 514, 542, 592, 
617, 671, 1086, 1090, x.80, 
103, 106, 258, 276, 315, 342, 
534, 562, 599, 86*4, 922, 1087, 
IO99, xi. 18, 42, 214, 246, 
271,292,328,392,394,405, 
566, 653,751, xii. 76, 158, 
183,222,384,607, 646; P.R. 
i. 121,470, ii. 26, 231, 245, 
iii. 206, 407, iv. 238, 348, 
460, 524, 6l6; S.A. 339, 
519, 916, 980, 1086, 1094, 
1097, 1 136, 1317, 1368,1369, 
1588, 1609, 1623, 1725 ; Lye. 
50, 53, 55, 136, 157, l6l, 
174; L'Al. 6, 60, 72, 119; 
Jl Penf 79, 120, 140 ; Arc. 
82, 85; Com. 34, 179, 191, 
234, 240, 320, 325, 351,377 , 
410, 425, 630, 747, 860, 891, 
948, 978, 999, 1015; Son. 
xviii. 11, xx. 3; Od.Paf). 39; 
Od.Sol. Miff. 10 ; Vac. Ex. 6 ; 
Brut. 9 ; Dante 11.3; Pf. v. 
24, Ixxxiv. 18, lxxxv, 8, 
lxxxvii. 11. 
no where, P.L. iii. 411, 620, 

iv. 44S; P.P. iv. 472. 
other where, Od. Paf)\ 25. 

whereat, P.L. i. 6l6, ii. 389, 
v. 851, vi. 202, viii. 309, xi. 
444, 868, xii. 636. 

whereby, P. L. iii. 621, v. 411, 
viii. 579; P. R.i.396. 

where'er, Lye. 155; Od. D.F. I. 
38 ; Pf. iv. 10. 

wherever, P. L. vii. 535, viii. 
170, ix. 325, xi. 79 t 177, 
385, xii. 449 ; P. R. iv. 404 ; 
S. A. 54,7, 1202. 

wherefore, P. L. i. 264, ii. 159, 
450, iv. 42, 657, 917, vi. 
116, ix. 331, x. 762; P.R. 
iii. 21, 23; S. A. 23, 356, 
1441 ; Com. 710. 

wherein, P. L. i. 523, ii. 76S, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

iii. 78, 262, 335, 408, iv. viii. 32, 165, 208, 210, 234, 

999, viii. 68, 391, 589, ix. 283, 380, ix. 4, 217, 220, 

725, x. 149, xi. 255, 479, 312, 673, 754, 890, 1004, 

608, 6l6, 901, xii. 41 ; P.P. 1022, x. 99, 129, 236, 329, 

i. 58; S. A. 564, 780; Com. 393, 427, 649, 682, 923, 

135; Son. x. 10; Od. Nat. 1059, 1065, xi. 178, 225, 

2, 62. 368, 369, 523, xii. 13, 14, 

Whereof, P. L. i. 650, ii. 584, 117, 205 ; P. R. i. 197, iv. 

723, iii. 504, iv. 119, 235, 264, 339, 424; S. A. 805, 

419, 937, vi. 518, vii. 64, 1143, 1282,1538, 1592; Lye. 

viii. 342, ix. 967, x. 122, 187; L'Al\9, 63, 123; II 

xii. 150; P.R. ii. 276; S.A. Pen/. 126; Com. 357,361, 

1174. 665, 938 ; Son. i. 4, xi. 7, 

whereon, P. L. i. 474, iii. 510, xv. 14, xvi. 7 ; Od. Nat. 19, 

519, iv. 521, v. 510, 764, vi. 68, 120, 159, 196 ; Vac. Ex. 

473, ix. 526, x. 919, xi. 38, 50 ; Pf. v. 34, vii. 3. 

382, 430, 556, 858, 897; P/. a-while, P. L. ii. 918, iii. 

Ixxxi. 11. 280, v. 364, 395, vi. 556, 

wherefo, P. L. xi. 722. 634, viii. 2, 258, ix. 744. 

wherefoe'er, P. JR. iii. 79- x. 447, 504, xii, 350 ; P. R. 

whereto, P. L. i. 156, vi. 469, i. 37, iii. 2; 5. A. 115, 

viii. 398, xii. 63. 363, 1636 ; Com. 551 ; Son. 

wherewith, P. L. iii. 148, ix. xi. 3. 

101 1 ; S.A. 585 ; Com. 443, all the while, P. L. i. 539, ii. 

449, 881 ; Od. Nat. 10; Od. 363. 

Pajf. 2. for a while, P. L. ii. 567. 

wherewithal, P. L. ii. 468. one while, P. it. i. 216. 

whether, P. L. i. 133, 178, ii. the while, P. L. ii. 731, vii. 

41, 152, iii. 523, iv. 592, 907, 249, ix. 431, 838 ; P. R 

v. 14, 189, 532, 741, 86*7, iii. 180; S.A. 1728. 

viii. 70, 159, 160, ix. 145, whilere, Od. Cir. 10. 

215, 237, 261, 788, x. 57, whilom, Com. 827; Od. V. F. L 

xi. $96, 566, 569, 786, xii. 24. 

47, 46*3, 474 ; P. R. i. 303, whilfl, Lye. 154 ; HAL 70 ; U 

ii'. 109, iii. 214, iv. 198, 596; Pen/'. 30 ; Com. 896 ; Of/. So/. 

Lye." i 56, 159; £'^. 17; Afy/' 23 ; £/?. A/. Jfm, 6l ; 

&>w.i. 13, xvii. 5 ; Od.D.F. I. Ep. IV. Sh. 9- 

39; Vac. Ex. 91. whip, P. L. ii. 701. 

whets, VAL 66; Pf. vii. 46. whirl'd, Od. Pajl 37. 

while, P. L. i. 15, 207, 215, whirlpool, P. L. ii. 1020. 

308, 380, 450, ii. 54, 1?8, whirlwind, P. L. ii. 541, 589, 

309,315,458,463,489,665, vi. 749; Pf Ixxxiii. 57. 

754, iii. 15, 135, 187,258, whirlwinds, P. L. i. 77, ii. 182. 

395, 688, iv. 6,89, 114, 266, whifper, P. L. iv. 158. 

447, 508, 533, 621, 685, v. whifper'd, P. L. v. 17, viii. 5l6. 

) 70, 300, 537, 568, 848, 858, whifpering, P. L. iv. 326, v. 26 ; 

vi. 157, 306, 337, 443, 564, P. R. ii. 26, iv. 250; VAl 

5*0, 633, vu. 28. 56'4, 6l 1, 1 16 ; Od. Nat* 66. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



whifpers, Lye. 136. 

whift, Od. Nat. 64. 

whittle, Com. 346. 

whittles, L'Al. 64. 

whit, Com. 774. 

white, P. L. iii. 475, vii. 439, 
xi. 206; P.R. iv. 76; S. A. 
327, 973; I#c. 144; 5on. 
xxiii. 9; Od. Nat. 42; Od. 
Paff. 35. 

whited, ifor. I. 6. 

white-handed, Cow. 213. 

white-robed, Od. D. F. I. 54. 

white-thorn, Lye. 48. 

whither, P.L. iii. 272, vi. 531, 
viii. 283, ix. 473, x. 922, xi. 
282, xii. 610; P.R. ii. 39, 
iv. 510; S. A. 1541. 

whoever, P. L. x. 14, 73. 

whole, P. L. i. 569, ii. 123, 
353, 365, 594, iii. l6l, 209, 
280, iv. 207, 284, vi. 655, 
727, 875, vii. 273, ix. 416, 
xi. 874, 888, xii. 269 ; P. R. 
i. 208; S.A.262, 265, 809, 
1059,1110,1476, 1512,1651 ; 
Pf. lxxxvi. 43. 

wholefome, P. L. iv. 330, x. 
847 ; P. R. iv. 458 ;Forc. of 
Con. 16. 

wholly, P. L. ix. 786. 

whomfoever, P. L. ix. 106S. 

whore, Fore, of Con. 3 ; Dante 
II. 3. 

v/hofo, P. L. ix. 724. 

why, P. L. ii. 741, ix. 703, 
704, 1152, x. 753, 771,773, 
774,789, 822, 854, 888,1003, 
xi. 201, 203, 502, 503, 51k, 
xii. 280; P. R. i. 355, ii. 
485, iii. 134,199; S. A. 93, 
205, 358, 800, 882, 965 ; Com. 

43,191,196,281,615,679; 
So«.i.xii,xi. 8; Od.D.F.L. 
42; P/.ii. 1. 
wicked, P. L. iv. 856, v. 890, 
vi. 277, xi. 812, 875, xii. 
541; P. ll.iw 95; S.A.S26, 



1285; Sat. 3; Pf. i. 2, 11, 
12, Ixxxii. 15, 26. 

wickedneis, P. L. xi. 60S ; S.A. 
834; P/. v. 10, vii. 8, 35. 

wicker, Com. 338. 

wicket, P. L. iii. 484. 

wide, P. L. i. 724, 762, ii. 133, 
150, 440,571, 641,655,755, 
884, 888,961, 1047, iii, 528, 
538, iv, 77, 284, v. 88, 142, 
254, 2S7, 648, vi. 2, 54, 77, 
241, 510, 577, 860, vii. 89, 
148, 205, 270, 301, 575, viii. 
78, 100, 141, 467, ix. 134, 
203, 245, x. 232, 280, 283, 
419, xi. 68, 638, 844, xii. 
224,371; P.R. i. 44, 118, 
ii. 232, iii. 254, 337, iv. 27, 
81; UAL 76; II Penf 70; 
Com. 945 ; Son. xix. 2 ; Od. 
Nat. 147 ; Vac. Ex. 4,1; Brut. 
7 ; Pf. Ixxx. 47. See far. 

wide-encroaching, P.L. x. 581, 
582. 

wide-hovering, P. L. xi. 73>9* 

wide-enclos'd, P. L. viii. 304, 

wide-interrupt, P. L. iii. 84, 

wide-wafting, P. L. vi. 253, xi. 
487. 

wide-water'd, II Penf. 75. 

wide-waving, P.L. xi. 121. 

wider, P. L. iii. 529, v. 648, 
xi. 381. 

wideft, P. L. iv. 382. 

widow'd,S. A. 806. 

widowhood, <S'. A. 958. 

wield, P. L. vi. 221, viii. 80, 
xi. 643 ; Com. 27. 

wielded, P. R. iv. 269. 

wife, P. L. viii. 498, ix. 267, 
x. 101, 198; S. A. 227, 724, 
725, 1193; 11 Penf. 112; 
Ep. M. Win. 2. 

wight, P. L. ii. 613, S55 ; Od. 
Paj: 14; Od.D.F.L. 41. 

wild, (fubft.) P. L. i. 407, iv, 
136, ix. 212. 

wild, (adj.) P. L. i. 60, ISO, 



VERBAL INDEX. 

ii. 541, 588, £10, 917, 951, 1250, 1254, 1262, 1317,1333, 

1014, iii. 424, 710, iv. 341, 1342, 1406*, 1414,1566,1730, 

v. 112, 297, 577, vi. 6*1 6, 1733 j L'AL 92 ,11 Pekf. 78, 

69S, 873, vii. 34, 212, 457, 176; Com-. 427, 648, 811, 

458, ix. 543, 910, 1117, x. 812, 857, 955 ; Od. Nat. 72, 

477 ; xi. 284 ; P. ft. i. 193, 135, 137, 142 ; Od. D. F. I. 

310 ? 331, 502, ii. 109, 304, 76 ; Euvip, 3 ; Pf. ii. 14, iv. 

iii. 301, iv. 523 ; S. A. 127, 18, vi. 20, vii. 26, 45, 59, 6l, 

974, 1403; Lye, 40; L'AL lxxxii. 17, lxxxiii.47,lxxxv. 

134 ; Com. $7 ; Od Nat. 29 ; 29, 30, 33, 55, lxxxvi. 22, 

Od. Faff. 51 ; Od. D. F. I. 38, 41. 

73 ; Pf lxxx. 55. at will, P. L. v. 295, 377, ix. 

wildernefs, P. L. ii. 943, iv. 855 ; P. ft. ii. 383, iv. 

135, 342, v. 294, ix. 245, xi. 269 ; S. A. 97 i Brut. 1. 

383, xii. 224, 313; P. ft. i. willing, P. L. iii. 73, 21]-, v. 
7, 156, 291, ii. 232, 307, 533 ; P. ft. i. 222 ; Vac. Ex. 

384, iv. 372, 395, 416, 543, 52. 

600 ; Pf. exxxvi. 58. willinger, P. L. ix. 382. 

wilderneffes, Com. 209. willingly, P. L. v. 466, ix. H67, 

wiles, P. L. ii. 51, 193, ix. 85, xi. 885 ; P. Ii. i.45, iii. 2l6; 

184, x. 11 ; P. R. i. 6, 120, 5. ^. 258, 1477, 1665. 

iii. 5, 442 ; S. A, 402, 871 ; willow, Com. S9L 

L'AL 27. willows, Lye. 42. 

wilful, P. L. x. 1042, xii. 619. wills, P. X. iv. 633, viii. 549- 

wilfully, P.L. v. 244 ; P. ft. i. wilt, P. 1*. i. 422, iii. 150, iv. 

225. 166,231,233,469,551 ;S. .4. 

will, P.L.i. 31, 106, 161,211, 577, 799, 828; Com. 312, 

ii. 199, 351, 559, 1025, iii. 403. 

108,115,174,184,270,656, wily, P. L. ix. 91, 625; Cow, 

685, iv. 71, 897, v. 526, 539, 151, 884. 

549, vi. 427, 728, 8l6, vii. win, P.L. vi. 88, 123, 160,290, 

79, 181, ix. 343, 350, 351, xii. 26*9, 502; P. R. iii. 73, 

355, 728, 1127, 1145, 1184, 340, iv. 469, 530; S. A. 393, 

x. 69, 195, 549, 746, 768, 1012, 1411 ; UAL 124. 

825, xi. 83, 145, 308, xii. Winchefter, Ep. M. Win. 2. 

237, 246 ; P. R. i. 50, 46l, wind, P. L. i. 231, 341, 537, 

46*9, ii- 259, iv. 497 ; S. A. 708, iii. 439, iv.982, vi. 282, 

6*0, 945, 1450, 1503, 1534, 309, vii. 130, ix. 514, xi. 

1536 ; Com. 600, 906* ; Son. 312; S. A. 10()*2, 1070 ; Lye. 

i. 7, vii. 12, xxii. 7 ; Pf v. 13, 126; L'Al.18; If.'i. 12, 

40, lxxxi. 49. See fret-. lxxxiii. 52. 

will, (verb) P. L. iii. 173, 214, wind, (verb) P. L. vi. 659, ix. 

v. 62, 235, 533, vii. 173, x. 215; Com. 1<*3. 

801, 826, xi. 146, xii. 485, winding, P. L. iv. 545 ; P. ft. 

524 ; P. ft. i. 88, 104, ii. 400, iii. 256; LM/. 139; Com. 

iii. 395, iv. 107, 108, 346, 873. 

552; S. A. 46*6, 467, 474, windings, Arc, 4ft 

*7$ 509, 920, 1179, 1220, window, / J . /,. iv. 191 ; L'AL 46. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

windows, P. L. xi. 849; U 641, iv. 157, Jtk, 974, v. 

Pen/. 159. 199, 250, 277, vi. 755, 771, 

winds, P.L. i. 235, 305, ii. 827, vii. 218, 235, 389, 434, 

286, 637, 717, 9^5, iii. 326, 439, 477, 484, viii. 5l6, ix. 

493, iv. 161, 560, v. 192, 1010, x. 244, xi. 738, xii. 

269, 655, vi. 196, vii. 213, 253; P. R. i. 500, ii. 366, 

431, ix. 989, 1122, x. 98, 403, iv. 66} S. A. 973; 

289, 664, 704, 1065, 1074, Lye. 93; L'AL 6; II Pen/. 

xi. 15; P. R. i. 317, ii. 26, 148; Com. 214, 249, 378; 

363, iv. 202, 413, 429; S. A. Son. xiv. 11 ; Od. Nat. 114; 

719, 96i, 1647; Lye. 91, Pf.lxxx. 6. 

137 ; L'AL 116 ; II Peitf. wings, (verb) P. L. iii. 87. 

126 ; Arc. 49 ; Com. 49, 87 ; winning, P. L. ii. 472, iv. 479, 

Od. Nat. 64; Od. Hor. 7. viii. 6l ; P. P. i. 154, 222, 

winds, (verb) P. L. iii. 563 ; ii. 213. 

Lye. 28. winnows, P. L. v. 270. 

four winds, P. L. ii. 516. wins, P. L. ii. 10l6 ; Hor, I. 4. 

Windy, P. L. iii. 440 ; S. A. winter, P. L. x. 655 ; Od. Nat. 

1574. 29; Od. D.F.I. 28. 

wine, P.L. i. 502, ix. 793, winter's, P. P. i. 317; S. A. 

1008, xii. 19; P. R. ii. 350, 1577; Of/. D. F. L 4; £/>. 

iii. 259; S. A. 443, 541, M.Win. 36. 

1418, 1613, 1670 ; Cow. 47, wintery, OrZ. P^ 6. 

106 ; So;?, xx. 10 ; Pf. iv. 36. wip'd, P. L. v. 131, xii. 643. 

wineroft'e rings, P. L. xii. 21. wipe, Lye. 181 ; Od. D.F. 1. 12. 

ume-preis, P. Ji. iv. l6. wire, P.L. vii. 597. 

win .3, P. it. iv. 1 1/ ; S. J. 553. wires, Od. Sol. Muf. 13 ; Vac. 

wing, P. L. i. 332, 617, ii. 72, Ex. 38. 

132, 634, iii. 13, v. 268, vi. wifard, Com. 571. 

362, 535, 778, vii. 4, 394, wifards, Od. Nat. 23. 

429, viii. 351, x. 3l6 ; P. R. wifard's, Com. 872. 

iv. 5S2 ; II Pen/. 52 ; So?i. wifdom, P. L. i. 565, iii. 50, 

vii. 2, xiii. 9 ; Od. JVaf. 50; 170, 686, 706, iv. 293, 491, 

Od. Pajf. 5, 50. 914, vii. 9, 10, 83, 130, 187, 

wing, (verb) P. L. ii. 842, iv. viii. 194, 552, 563, ix. 725, 

936, vii. 425, ix. 45. x. 373, xi. 636, xii. 154, 

on wing, P. L. i. 345, ii. 529, 332, 576 ; P. R. i. 68, 175, 

vi. 74, 243. 386, ii. 34, 431, iii. 91, iv. 

without wing, P. R. iv. 541. 222, 319, 528 ; S. A. 54, 57, 

wing'd, P.L. i. 1/5, 674, 752, 207, 936, 1010, 1747; Pf. 

ii. 944, iii. 229, iv. 576, 788, exxxvi. 17. 

v. 55, 247, 277, 468, 498, wifdom-giving, P. L. ix. 679> 

744,, vi. 279, vii. 199, 572, wifdom's, P. L. iii. 687, i*, 

x. 91, xi. 7, 706 ; Com. 730. 809 ; II Pen/. 16 ; Com. 375. 

winged, S. A. 12S3 ; Od. Cir. 1. wife, P. L. i. 155, 193, 202, iii. 

wings, P. L. i. 20, 225, 76S, 680, iv. 886, 904, 907, 910, 

ii. 408, 631, 700, S85, 906, 94S, viii. 26, 173, ix. 338, 

949, 1Q46 ? iii. 73, 382, 627, 679, 683, 7 $9, 773, 867, 938, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



x. 7, 881, 889, xi. 666, xii. 

568; P.P. i. 486; ii. 454, 

468, iii. 1 1, 1 15, iv. 143, 322, 

535; S.A. 652; Arc. 20; 

Com. 448, 705, 813 ; Son. ix. 

14, xii. 12, xxi. 12; Vac. Ex. 

48 ; Pf. ii. 22, vii. 41, lxxxi. 

53. 

leaft wife, P. L. viii. 578. 

more wife, P. L. vii. 425, ix. 
311. 
wifelier, P. L. x. 1023. 
wifely, P. L. viii. 73 ; Son. ix. 

2 ; Vac. Ex. 70. 
wifer, P. R. i. 439. 
wifer far, P.P. ii. 205. 
wifeft, P. L. i. 400, viii. 550; 

P. R. ii. 170, iii. 240, iv. 

276, 293 ; S. A. 210, 75% 

867, 1034 ; Od. Nat. 149. 
wifh, P. L. ii. 157, vi. 493, 818. 

viii. 451, ix. 25S, 423, x. 

834 ; P. R. iv. 376 ; S. A. 

228, 1077, 1127, 1539- 
wifh (verb) P. .L. ii. 606, viii. 

43,63; S.A. 14,16; Ep.W. 

Sh. 16. 
wifh'd, P. X. vi. 150, 842, ix. 

421,422,714,1025, x. 454, 

xi. 181 ; Com. 558, 574, 950. 
wifhed, P. L. i. 208. 
wifhes, P. jL. x. 901 ; Arc. 6. 
wit, P. X. ix. 93 ; L'Al. 123; 

Cow. 790. 
witcheries, Com. 523. 
witches, P. L. ii. 665. 
withal, P. £. v. 238, xii. 82; 

P. R. iv. 128 ; S. A. 58. 
withdraw, P. L. vii. 612, ix. 

261, xii. 107; P. it- ii. 55; 

S. A. 192. 
withdraws, P. L. v. 686. 
withdrew, P. L. ix. 386. 
wither'd, P. L. i. 612, vi. 850, 

xi. 540; P.P. i. 316. 
withers, Com. 744. 
withheld, P. £. vii. 1 17, x. £03 ; 
Od. Nat. 79 1 Pf- lxxxiv, 43. 



withhold, P. L. v. 62; S.A 
1125. 

withholds, P. P. ii. 380 ; S. A. 
1233. 

within, P. X. i. 388, 705, 725, 
792, ii. 12, 236, 295, 659, iii. 
194, iv. 20, 64, 182, 461, 
586, 964, v. 270, 303, 410, 
554, vi. 5, 158, vii. 65, 120, 
167, 204, 305, viii. 242, 440, 
642, ix. 96, 121, 315, 333, 
348,349,681,836,955,1010, 
3122, x. 230,231,243,369, 
717, xi. 470, xii. 91, 488, 
523,587; P. P. i. 41, 198, 
ii.64,466, 471, iv. 284 ; S.A. 
77, 429, 584, 595, 663, 1038 ; 
Com. 147, 231 , 316 ; Son. viii. 
4; Od.Nat. 217; P/. iv.22, 
lxxxv. 40, lxxxvii. 8. 
from within, P. L. v. 713. 

without, P. L. See bound, 
delay, dimenfion, end, hope, 
law, leave, meafure, num- 
ber, opening, recal, reftraint. 
And P. R. i. 199, 353, ii. 
119, 125, 250,306,433, iii. 
90, 193, 356, 371, iv. 106, 
231,392; S.A. 53,77, 82, 
157, 288, 312, 1006, 1238, 
1481, 1625,1642, 1659 ; Coin. 
310, 509, 688, 8 16, 96O ; Son. 
xix. 13, xxiii. 8 ; Vac. Ex. 27 ; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 7 ; Pf. lxxx. 59. 
from without, P. L. x. 714, 
xii. 93. 

withftand, P. L. vi. 253 ; P.P. 
iii. 250; S.A. 127, 1111. 

withftands, P. L. ii. 6l0. 

withftood, P. L. v. 242, vii. 300. 

witnefs, P. L. i. 503, 635, ix. 
317,334; P. R. i. 26, 29, 
ii. 435, iii. 107 ; S. A. 239, 
906, 1752 ; Lye. 82 ; Ep. IV. 
Sh. 6; Hor. 1.4. 

witnefs, (verb) P. L. iii. 700, 
v. 202>, vi. 563, 564, vii. 6l7, 
x. 914, xii. 101. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



witnefsM, P. L. i. 57. 

wits, P. JR. iv. 24,1 ; Vac. Ex. 

22. 
wives, P. L. xi. 737 ; P. -R- ii. 

171 ; S. A. 957. 
woe, P. L. i. 3, 64, 414, ii. 87, 

l6l, 225, 608, 6'95, 872, iii. 

633, iv. 5, 70, 368, 369, v. 

543, vi. 877, 907, viii. 333, 

638, ix. 11, 133, 134, 255, 

645, 783, 831, 916, x. 465, 

555, 935, 96'1, 980, xi. 60, 

632;P.#.i.398,399;S.^. 

351, 813; Lye. 106; Son. 

xviii. 14 ; Od. Paff. 9, 32 ; 

Pf lxxxv. 6. 
woes, P. L. iv. 535, x. 742, 

754 ; Com. 836 ; Pf. lxxxviii. 

9. 
woful, P. L. x. 984 ; Lye. 165. 
wolf, P. L. iv. 183 ; Lye. 128 ; 

Com. 70, 504. 
wolves, P. X. xii. 508; Cows. 

534; Son. xvi. 14. 
woman, P. L. ii. 650, viii. 496, 

ix. 233, 343, 481, x. 137, 

158, 179, 192, 837, xi. 496, 

633, xii. 379 ; P. R. i. 65, 
ii. 208 ; S. A. 50, 202, 236, 
379, 7*9, 903, 1114; Son. 
xxii. 6. 

womankind, P. jR. ii. 175. 
woman's, P. L. iv. 638, xi. 

116,617, xii. 327,543,601; 

P. it. i. 64 ;S. ^4. 783, 1012. 
womb, P. L. i. 673, ii. 150, 

657,766,778,798, 91 1, v. 

181, 302, 388, vii. 276, 454, 

x. 476, 1053, xii. 381; S.A. 

634, 1703; Od. D.F.L 30; 
Orf. orc Tme, 4 ; £p. Jf. Jfw. 
33 ; Pf. vii. 53. 

women, P. L. iv. 409, ix. 

1183, xi. 582; P. #. ii. 68, 

71, 153, 169, 204; 5. ^. 

211,216,957,983. 
won, P. X. ii. 762, 978, iii. 12, 

iv, 853, vi. 122, viii. 43, 



503, ix. 131, 674, 734, 991, 

x. 372, 459, xi. 375, xii. 

262 ; P. R. i. 63, 279, 426, 

iii. 33, 156, 297, iv. 5; S.A. 

470, 1099, 1102; L'Al. 148; 

Son. xx. 4 ; Od. Nat. 104 ; 

Pf cxiv. 2. 
wonder, P. L. i. 777, iii. 542, 

552, 606, iv. 205, 363, v. 9, 

vi. 219, vii. 70, viii. 11, ix. 

533, 566, x. 487, xi. 733, 

xii. 468; P. R. i. 38, 481, 

ii. 209, iii. 24, 280 ; S. A. 

1642 ; Com. 265 ; Od. Nat. 

64>;Ep. W.Sh.7. 

no wonder, P. L. i. 282, iv, 

577; P. R. iii. 229; Pf 

vii. 4. 

what wonder, P. L. ix. 221. 
wonder, (verb) P. L. v. 439, 

491, ix. 532 ; P. U. ii. 303 ; 

S. A. 215; Arc. 43; Cow. 

747. 
wonder'd, P. Z. ix. 856, x. 

509. 
wonderful, P. L. iii. 702, ix. 

862, x. 482. 

more wonderful, P. L. xii. 
471. 
wondering, P. L. i. 693, iii. 

273, iv. 451, v. 54,89, viii. 

257, x. 20, 510. 
wonderous, P. L. i. 703, ii. 

1028, iii. 285, 663, 665, v. 

155, vi. 377, 754, vii. 483, 

viii. 68, ix. 650, x. 312, 348, 

xi. 819, xii. 200, 500; P. R. 

iii. 434; S. A. 167, 589, 

1440 ; II Penf. 114 ; Pf viii. 

1, 23, lxxxviii. 50. 
wonderoufly, P. L. iii. 587. 
wonders, P. X. vi. 790, vii. 

223 ; S. A. 753 ; Pf. lxxxvi. 

33, lxxxviii. 41, cxiv. 6. 
wons, P. i. vii. 457. 
wont, P. £. i. 332, 764, iii. 

656, 737, v. 32„ 123, 677, 

vi. 93, ix. 842, x. 103 j P. K. 



VERBAL INDEX. 

i. 12, ii. 264 ; S. A. 4, 1485, 349, iii. 122 ; S. A. 83, 200 ; 

1487 $ Pf lxxxi. 9. Com. 32 I ; Son, xi. 5. 

wonted, P. L. i. 527, v. 210, words, P L. i. 82, 150, 528, 

705, vi. 783, 851, viii. 202, 621, 663, ii. 50,226, 735, 

ix. 1076; T. R. iv. 449; 737, iii. 266, 930, v. 66, 113, 

S. A. 748 ; II Penf 37 ; Com. 544, 616, 703, 810, 873, vi, 

549; Od. Nat. 79, 196. 490, 5:8, vii. 113, viii. 57, 

wont'll, Com. 332. 215, 246 379, 492, 60% ix. 

wood, P. L. iv. 342, 538, vi. 290, 379,550, 733, 73. , 855, 

70, 575, ix. 1100, x. 333, 920, IO06, 1134, 1144, x. 

xi. 440, xii. 119; P. P. ii. 459, 608, 865, 940, 968, xi. 

184, iv. 448, 449; L'Al. 56; 32, 141, 295, 499, xii. 55, 

II Penf. 154 ; Arc. 32, 45 ; 374, 609 ; P. R. i. 106, 222 ; 

Com. 37, 60, 181, 270, 312, 228, 320, ii. 34, 301, 337, 

520; Pf. lxxx. 53, lxxxiii. iii. 6, 9, 346; S. A. 176, 

53. 184, 235, 277, 472, 729, 

woodbine, P. L. ix. 2l6 ; Lye. 905, 1351 ; Com. 781, 801 ; 

146. Son. x. 12, xiii. 3; Od. Nat. 

wood-gods, P. R. ii. 297. 175 ; Sopk. 2 ; Pf v. 1. 

woodman, Com. 484. wore, P. L. iii, 641, iv. 305, 

wood-notes, L'AL 134. v. 277, vii. 303 ; Com. 448. 

wood-nymph, P. L. v. 381 ix. wore out, P. R. ii. 279- 

386. work, P. L. i. 674, 731, iii. 

wood-nymphs, P. R. ii. 297- 505, iv. 380, 6l8, 726, v. 

woods, P. L. vi. 645, vii. 35, 112, 211, 255, 853, vi. 453, 

326, 434, viii. 275, 5l6, ix. 507,698, 76l,vii. 93,353,551, 

116, 910, 1086, x. 700, 860, 56"7,56'8,590,59t,593,595, 

xi. 187, 567; P. R. i. 503, viii. 234, ix, 202, 208, 230, 

ii. 374, iii. 332; S. A. 1700; x- 255, 270, 312, 391, xii. 

Lye. 20, 39, 193; // Penf 62, 119; P- P. i- 223, ii. 

63 ; Com. 88, 150, 187, 446, 112, 295, iv. 634 ; S. A. 70, 

.549 ; Son. i. 2 ; Od. May-M. 226, 565, 680, 1260, l66'2 ; 

7. // Penf 143 ; Son. xvi. 6, xix. 

wwoiy, P. L. iv. 141, viii. 303, 10; Od. Nat. 7. See Days, 

ix. 1118; P. P. ii. 246, 294; work, (verb) P. L. i. 151, 646, 

JI Penf. 29- ii. 26l, iii. 635, v. 478, ix. 

woo'd, P.L. viii. 503 ; -Son. xiii. 131, 255, x. 555; P. R. i. 

13. 266; 5'. ^. 367; Com. 715; 

wooes CM AW. 38. Od. PaJ. 31 ; Pf vi. 16. 

woof, P. L. xi. 244 ; Cow. 83. workers, Pf. v. 13. 

wool Com. 75 1 . working, P. L. xii. 489. 

vvoom, Com. 131. workmanfhip, Co?;?. 747- 

Worcefter's, Son. xvi. 9. work-matter, P. X. iii. 696. 

*ord, P. L. iii. 144, 170, 227, W<*k«, F. £• >• 20], 431, 694, 

708, iv. 81, 401, v. 836, vi, ii. 370, 1039, i», 49, 59, 

32, vii. 163, 175, 208, 217, 277,447,455,663,665,695, 

Viii. 223, x. 856; l\ li. i. 702, i v. 314, 566, 679, v. 33, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



153, 158, vi. 274, vii. 97, 
112, 159, 516, 543, 602, 
629, viii. 68, ix. 234, 783, 
897,941, x. 644, xi. 34, 64, 
578, 639, xii. 306, 394, 410, 
427, 536, 565, 578, 579; 
P. P. iii. 80; S. A. 14,955; 
Son. xiv. 5 ; Pf. viii. 17, 
Ixxxvi. 26, 28. 

works, (verb) P. L. viii. 95, 
525, ix. 512; P. R. ii. 371. 

world, P. X. i. 3, 32, 251, 375, 
ii. 262, 347, 403, 442, 572, 
667, 1004, 1030, 1052, iii. 
11, 74, 89, 308, 334, 419, 
464, 494, 543, 554, iv. 34, 
107, 113, 272, 391, 413, 
937, v. 154, 171, 389, 455, 
569,577,vi. 146, vii. 62, 71, 
155, 220, 231, 269, 554, 
568, 617, 621, 636, viii. 
15, 123, 151, 332, 472, ix. 
11, 153, 568„ x. 257, 303, 
318, 322, 372, 377, 381, 392, 
422, 467, 481, 489, 500, 6l7, 
689, 721, 836, 892, 984, xi. 
134, 283, 328, 406, 627, 701 , 
793,810,821,874,877,894, 
xii. 3,6,105,449,537, 547, 
554, 580, 646; P. R. i. 34, 
44, 162, 392, 46l, ii. 443, 
iii. 18, 39, 225, 236, 393, 
iv. 89, 150, 163, 182, 203, 
210, 223, 252, 311, 372, 379, 
415; Lye. 80, 158; Arc. 71, 
Com. 720 ; Son. xix. 2 ; Od. 
Nat. 54, 82, 122 ; Od. Cir. 
11; Od. D.F, 1.32,55,63; 
Ep. M. Win. 51 ; Brut. 14; 
Pf. exxxvi. 26. 

worldly, P. L. xi. 803, xii. 
568 ; P. R. iv. 213. 

world's, P. L. iii. 562, 709, v. 
188, xii, 313, 459, 467; Son. 
xxii. 13 ; Od. Nat. 163 ; Od. 
D.F. I. 77; Pf. vii. 30. 

Worlds, P. L. i. 650, ii. 916, 
iii. 566, 567, 674, v. 268, vi. 



36, vii. 191, 209, viii. 175, x. 

237, 362, 441 ; P. R. iv. 633 ; 

II Penf 90. 
worm, P. L. iv. 704, vi. 739, 

vii. 476, ix. 1068 ; P. R. i. 

312; S. A.74>; Arc. 53. 
worms, Com. 715. 
wormy, Od. D. F. I. 31. 
worm, P. L. x. 573, xi. 243. 
worried, S. A. 906. 
worfe, P. L. i. 119, ii. 49, 83, 

85, 113, 163, 169, 186, 196, 

293, 626, 996, iii. 91, iv. 26, 

40, 100, vi. 607, viii. 397, ix: 

102, 128,265,715, 1122, x. 

717, 780, 1055, xi. 268, xii. 

106, 484; P. R. iii. 205, 

207, 208, 419, iv. 486 ; S. A. 

68, 284, 399, 418, 433, 485, 

893, 904 ; Son. xi. 13 ; Od. 

Paff. 11 ; Fore, of Con. 14. 

far worfe, P. L. vi. 34, 863, 
x. 903. 

much worfe, P. L. ix. 123, 
xi. 601. 
worfe, (verb) P. L. vi. 440. 
worfhip, P. L. ii. 248, ix. 198, 

xi. 318, xii. 532; P.P. iii. 

426. 
worfhip, (verb) P. L. v. 194, 

vii. 515, 628, ix. 6ll, xi. 

578, xii. 119; P.P. ii. 475, 

iii. 416, iv. 167, 176, 179, 

192; Brut.5;Pf.v.20. 
worlhippers, P. L.\. 46l, vii. 

613, 630, ix. 705; S. A. 

471. 
wormipt, P. L. i. 397; Com. 

302 ; Son. xviii. 4; Od. Nat. 

220. 
worft, P. L. i. 276, ii. 100, l63, 

224, iv. 204, v. 742, vi. 462, 

ix. 269, 979, x. 73 ; P. R. 

iii. 200. 223; S.A. 105,155, 

195, 1264, 1570, 1571; Vac. 

Ex. 12. 

at worft, Com. 484. 
worth, P. L. i. 378 t 529, ii- 



VERBAL INDEX. 



429, viii. 502, ix. 1183; 
P. U, i. 231, 370, ii. 227; 
Arc. 8; Com. 793 ; Son. xiii. 
5 ; Vac. Ex. 79 ; Pf. cxxxvi. 
90. 

worth, (adj.) P. L. i. 262, ii. 

223, 376, v. 308, x. 488 ; 

P. P. iii. 51,393, iv.86,329, 

514,539 ;S.A. 250; Com. 505. 
worth or not worth ; P. R. iii. 

151. 
worthier, P. L. v. 76, vi. 180 ; 

ix. 100; P. JR. i. 27, in. 195. 
worthies, P. R. iii. 74. 
worthier!, P. L. i. 759, iii. 310, 

703, vi. 177,185,707, 888; 

P. R. iii. 226; 5. 4. 276, 

369 ; ^4rc. 74. 
worthiefs, S. A. 1020. 
worthily, P. L. xi. 524. 
worthy, P. L. iv. 241, 291, v. 

557, vi. 420, viii. 568, 584, 

ix. 746, xii. 161 ; P. R. i. 

17, 141, ii. 445, iii. 70; 

S.A. 1164; Lye. 118; Cowz. 

788. 
wove, P. L. iv. 348, ix. 839; 

Arc. 47. 
woven, Son. xi. 2. 
would, P. Z. iii. 106, iv. 889, 

vi. 615, viii. 503, ix. 913, 

946, 1134, x. 517, 775, 777, 

821, xi. 323, 505, 547; 

P. R. i. 27, 35, ii. 216, 331, 

iii. 13, 18, 140, 209, 219, 

430, iv. 378, 441, 453; 
S. A. 66, 249, 355, 804, 
860,871, 1214, 1400, 1455, 
1466, 1535; Lye. 10, 35; 
L'Al. 148; Com. 219, 305, 
309, 373, 390, 623, 625, 702, 
728,731,732,733,735,758, 
772, 1018, 1023; Sort, xi. 
11; Od. PaJJ\ 46, 49, 53; 
Ep. W. Sh. 16; Ep. Hobf. 
II. 16; Fore, of Con. 10; Pf. 
lxxxi. 44, 55, 57, 65. 

would'ft, P. L. iv, W, 957, 



ix. 300, 367, x. 763; P. H, 

ii. 321, 426, iv. 495 ; S. A, 

794,941, 944, 1104, 1105, 

1128; Com. 699- 
wound, P. L. i. 447, 689, iii, 

252, vi. 329, 348, 405, 435, 

viii. 467, ix. 486, 782, xii. 

392; P. R. i. 53, 59, iv. 

622; S.A. 1581; Com. 1000. 
wound, (verb) P. L. ix. 589, 

xi. 299. 
wounded, P. L. i. 452 ; Od, 

Nat. 204. 
wounding, Od. Cir. 25. 
wounds, P. L. ii. 168, iv. 99, 

vi. 368, xii. 190, 387; P.P. 

i. 444; S.A. 186, 607, 620. 
wrack, P. I>. iv. 994, vi. 67O, 

xi. 821; P. R. iv. 452. 
wracking, P. L. ii. 182. 
wrapt, P. L. ii. 183, ix. 158 ; 

Com. 546; Od.Nat. 31. 
wrath, P. L. i. 54, 110, 220, 

ii. 83, 688, 733, 734, iii. 

264, 275, 406, iv. 74, 912> 

v. 890, vi. 59, 826, 865, ix. 

14, x. 95, 340, 795, 797, 

834, 951, xi. 815, xii. 478; 

S. A. 1683 ; Com. 803 ; Od. 

Cir. 24; Od. D. F. I. 66; 

Pf. ii. 10, 27, lxxx. 19, 

lxxxv. 11, lxxxviii. 29, 65. 
wrathful, Pf. cxxxvi. 10. 
without wrath, P. L. x. 1048. 
wreath, P. L. ix. 517 ; P. R- ii. 

459 ; Son. xvi. 9. 
wreath 'd, P. L. iv. 346, ix. 

892; P. P. iv. 76; Cow. 

55. 
wreathed, L'Al. 28. 
wreaths, P. L. vi. 58 ; Cow. 

849 ; Od. Hor. 4. 
wreck, P. L. iii. 241, iv. 11 5 

S. A. 1044. 
wreck'd, P. Ji. ii. 228. 
wrench, Son. xxi. 4. 
wrefted, P.L. xi. 5C3; P. J?. 

i. 470 I S. A, 384, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



wreftlers, S. A. 1324. 
wretched, P. L. x. 985, xi. 

501, xii. 74; P. JR. i. 345; 

Lye. 124. 
wring, 5.^.1199. 
wrinkled, P. L. xi. 843 ; LAI. 

31 ; Com. 871. 
wrifts, Com. 834. 
writ, P.P. i. 260, iii. 184; 

S. A. 657 ; So?t. xi. 1, xiii. 

7 ; Fore, of Con. 20. 
write, P. L. iv. 758, xii. 489 ; 

P. R. iv. 227, 383 ; Od. Paf. 

34; P/. lxxxvii. 21. 
writh'd, P. L. vi. 328, x. 569* 
written, P. L. xii. 506, 513; 

P. JR. i. 347, iv. 175, 556, 

560. 
wrong, P. L. ix. 300, 666, xii. 

98; P. #. i. 389; 5. A. 

76, 1030; P/. lxxxii. 6, 

lxxxiv. 9' 
wrong, (verb) P. X. iv, 387. 
wrong'd, P. L. iv. 387- 
wrongs, P. P. iii. 93; 5. A. 

105; Od.Paff. 11. 
wrote, P. P. iv. 226. 
wroth, Od.Nat. 17 1. 
wrought, P. L. i. 642, ii. 295, 

iv. 49, 699, v. 901, vi. 6'57, 

691, 76l, viii. 507, ix. 70, 

513, 939, x. 1080, xi. 55, 

524, 572 ; P. JR. ii. 215, iii. 

415; S. A. SIS, 850, 1095, 
1532 ;Pf. vii. 9, lxxxv. 6. 
wrought on, P. L. x. 300. 

X. 

Xerxes, P. L. x. 307. 
Y. 

yawning, P. L. vi. 875, x. 635. 
yea, P. L. i. 387, iv. 207; 

P. P. i. 117; Cow. 428, 

591 ; Od. Nat. 141 ; Vac. Ex. 

86. 
year, P. L. iii. 40, v. 583 ; Lye. 

5; £0/1. i. 11, vii. 2, xxii. 

5 ; Pf. iv. 33. 



yearly, P. X. i. 452, x. 575. 

years, P. L. iii. 581, vii. 342, 
viii. 69, ix. 45, xi. 534, xii. 
345 ; P. R. i. 48, 206, 210, 
ii. 96, iii. 31, 37,40; Com. 
114; Son. xviii. 1, xxii. 1; 
£^. M. Win. 64. 

y'clep'd, ZA4J. 12. 

yell'd, P. ii. iv. 423. 

yelling, P. L. ii. 795 ; P. £. iv. 
629. 

yellow, P. L. xi. 435. 

yellow-fkirted, Od. Nat. 235. 

yes, Com. 584. 

yefterday, P. i. v. 675. 

yet, P. L. i. 62, 94, 153, 269, 
337, 364, 380, 415, 463, 493, 
509,523,588,591,599,611, 
631, ii. 21, 105, 117, 137, 
206,304,331,338, 500, 566, 
627, 648, 656, 658, 739, iii. 
26, 65, 83, 160, 174, 178, 
246, 267, 381, 444, 590, 637, 
iv. 13, 48, 61, 124, 142, 
196,361,373,379,389,439, 
478, 503, 512, 534, 663, 774, 
822, 850, 915, 997 , v. 99, 
116, 140, 158,237,359, 366, 
420, 430, 465, 467, 550, 552, 
570, 577, 623, 66 1, 685, 773, 
782, 791, 826, 889, vi. 24, 
115, 125, 182, 186, 232, 283, 
344, 378, 383, 452, 466, 492, 
500, 501, 602, 615, 691, 813, 
853, 912, vii. 21,28, 61,67, 
82, 98, 115, 145, 146, 247, 
276, 33 1 , 440, 504, 505, 506, 
536, 551, 589, viii. 13, 48, 
98, 155, 206, 294, 335, 429, 
501, 446, 607, 610, ix. 13, 
104, 108, 185, 186, 235, 349, 
359,377,391,390,614,619, 
658, 659, 668, 688, 707, 737, 
743, 757, 769, 818, 845, 905, 
912,927,932,946, 1167, x. 
24, 51, 77, 135, 160, 171, 
5255, 362, 534, 556, 589, 755, 
764,782,789,923,951,977, 
9S7, 988, xi. ,8„ 11, 108, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



117, 139, 146, 156, 233, 266, 
330, 349, 409, 427, 469, 527, 
613, 6l6, 889, xii. 8, 13, 
82,97, H4, 117, 120, 127, 
140, 280, 36*0, 380, 530, 604, 
620; P.R.I 183,201,209, 
214,221,26*8,292,430,491, 
ii. 17, 160, 309, 441, 446, 
476, iii. 37, 42, 100, 140, 
142, 149, 313,375, 397, iv. 
23, 165, 395, 420, 439, 443, 
451, 460, 509, 546, 622; 
S.A. 43,55,75,101, 103,195, 
205, 215, 240, 300, 402, 433, 
682,701,726,746,766,882, 
961,1003,1077,1171,1252, 
1265, 1377, 1401, 1408, 
1500, 1532, 1535, 1578,1592, 
I66O, 1/1 8 ; Lye. 1 ; II Penf. 
22, 30 ; Arc. 78, 107 ? Com. 
12, 44, 326, 410, 438, 537, 
793, 802, 809, 820 ; Son. vii. 
9, x. 11, xv. 9, xxii. 5, 
xxiii. 7; Od.Nat. 151, 155; 
Od. Puff. 20, 46 ; Od. D. F. 
I. 22, 29; Ep.M. Win. 11; 
Vac. Ex. 67,76, 80, 82, 85; 
Ep. Hobf. II. 32 ; Pf. iv. 13, 
26, viii. 12. 

yield, P. L. i. 108, 179, ii- 332, 
573, iii. 245, v. 401, 428, vi. 
483, viii. 575, ix. 248, 1021, 
xi. 42, 526, 623 ; S. A. 259, 
593; P/i.9, Ixxxiii. 59. . 

yielded, P. L. i. 729, «. 24,iv. 
309, 310, 333, 489, ix. 902, 
x. 62S ; S. A. 407, 848. 

yielding, P. L. vii. 310,311. 

yields, P. L. v. 39, 338, vii. 
88, 541; P. R. ii.409; S.A. 
15. 

yoke, P. L. ii. 256, iv. 975, v. 
786, 882, x. 307, 1045; 
P. R. i. 217, ii. 48, iv. 135 ; 
S.A. 39, 42; 11 Penf. 59; 
Pf. lxxxvii. 12. 

yok'd. 6'. A. 410. 

yon, P. L. i. 180, 280, ii. 183, 



iv. 626, 1011, xi. 205 5 11 

Penf. 52 ; Son. i. 1. 
yonder, P. L. ii. 684, iv. 626, 

v. 367, 620, ix. 218, x. 617, 

xi. 229, 328, xii. 142, 591 ; 

S.A. 3. 
yore, II Penf. 23. 
young, P. L. iv. 279, vii. 420, 

xi. 668 ; P. Jl. ii. 18, 329, 

iii. 34, 3'5, 101 ; Lye. 9 ; 

L'Al. 97; Com. 492, 755, 

999; Son.\n.l;Od. D.F.I. 

25, 26 ; Pf lxxx. 63, lxxxiv. 

11. 
younger, P. L. iv. 279, vii. 

420, xi. 668 ; S. A. 336. 
youngeft, P. L. iii. 151. 
youth, P. L. i. 770, iii. 638, iv. 

552, xi. 246, 539,542, 594; 

P. R. ii. 197, 200, iv. 508 ; 

L'Al. 264, 938; Lye. 164 ; 

L'Al. 95; Com. 55, 609, 

970 ; Son. vii. 1 ; Od. D. F. 

I. 53; Od. May-M. 6; Od. 

Hor. 1. 
youth's, P. R. i. 67. 
youthful, P. L. iv. 338, 845, x. 

218; S.A. 1442; L'Al. 26; 

Com. 289, 669. 



zeal, P. L. ii. 4S5, iii. 452, v. 

593, 805, 807, 849, 900, ix. 

665, 676, xi. 801; P.R. iii. 

171, 172, 175, 407, 412; 

S. A. 895, 1420. 
zealous, P. L. iv. 565. 
zenith, P. L. i. 745, x. 329- 
Zephon, P. L. iv. 788, 834, 

854, 868. 
Zephyr, P. L. iv. 329, x. 705. 
Zcphyrus, P. L. v. 16*. 
zodiack, P. L. xi. 247,xii.255. 
zone, P. L. ii. 397, v. 281, 

560, vii. 580; P.R. ii. 214. 
Zophdel, P. L. vi. 535. 
Zora's, 6*. A. 181. 



Verbal index 



GREEK WORDS USED BY MILTON, 



A. 

Ay>Mx t Pf cxiv. 1. 
Jk&aov, Pf cxiv. 22. 
AlyvTrliov, Pj\ cxiv. 2. 
alvot, Pf. cxiv. 12. 
clKy.u%> Phil, ad Reg. 5. 
uKuy,, Pf cxiv. 9, 16. 
apcc, Pf cxiv. 10. 
u(ascQs7, In Eff. 1. 
ccj, In Eff 2. 
avx, Phil, ad Reg. 1. 
dvxcrx'ipTr.crav, Pf. cxiv. 10. 
c&^'a!^x^pT7}^raT , , P/l cxiv. 17. 
«v^po;y, Phil, ad Reg. 1 . 
«Ttrsipecria, P/*. CXIV. 8, 15. 
ccwixfieoc, Pf cxiv. 2. 

«tto, P/. cxiv. 22. 

«p, P/ cxiv. 6, 13, 17 ; Phil 

ad Reg. 4. 
clpyvpouSix, Pf cxiv. 7 5 14» 
«pwf, Pf cxiv. 11, 18. 
«S9j, Phil, ad Reg. 3. 
avTotpvls, In Eff. 2. 
*(p&oio, Phil, ad Pveg. 3, 

B. 

Gouortfea, Pf cxiv. 10, 17. 
@ctf£u.fG<pb)jH)v, Pf cxiv. 1. 
8cls?\\iviv, Pf cxiv. 4. 
faiirav, In Eff. 2. 

r. 

yxTct, Pf cxiv. 39, 20, 
yiy$x<p§xiy In Eff. 1. 
ytKxTi, In Eff 4. 
y«o?, iy. cxiv. 3. 

A. 

JaxfuoiVync, P/ cxiv. 3. 
riWov, Phil, ad Reg. 2. 
fli, Pf cxiv, 3. 

$^o», py: cxiv. 2. 

^jacacra, P/ez7. fld Reg. 2. 

ha-^x^a, In Eff. 4, 

VOL. I. 



E. 

&r, Pf cxiv. 3. 
«», P/«7. ad Reg. 1. 
s?&, P/. cxiv. 3. 

*»&?, I/i P/. 2. 
tlxovx, In Eff. 1 . 
sfay/ASVSj, P/^ cxiv. 6\ 13. 

I*, P/. cxiv. 8, 9, 21 ; P/«7. fl3 

Reg. 5. 
hrvTriovrx, Pf. cxiv. 19. 
tKTviruToy, In Eff. 3. 
lv, Pf. cxiv. 4. 
evvopov, Phil, ad Reg. 
hrpoKuhv, Pf cxiv. 5. 
zTrerra, Phil, ad R.eg. 4. 
eiriyyQiires, In Eff. 3. 
epivmt, Pf cxiv. 10, 17» 
Ippwno-e, Pf cxiv. 5. 
Iffumcrots, Pf cxiv. 12. 
irvtpi^i^j Pf cxiv. 6. 
iry^sAi^?, P/. cxiv. 3. 
evrpappa, Pf cxiv. 9, l6\ 

Z. 
£uypa(pe, In Eff. 4. 

0. 

Sa?.a£r<7a, P/I cxiv. 5, 12. 
©s^, P/I' cxiv. 19, 20. 
©so?, Pf cxiv. 4. 
$vulqi> P/fo7. tfd Peg. 4* 

I. 

'lax«£», P/! cxiv. 1. 
'lo^aMj, P/I cxiv. 14, 
'iopS&ij?, P/: cxiv. 7. 
'12^, P/. cxiv. 3. 

? f0 ?, py: cxiv. 7, 14. 

»<r0», PAz7. ad Reg. 2. 
I<rp«r,*, P/: cxiv. 1. 
'iffraxfteto, Pf Cxiv. 20, 

k. 

xaptvov, Phil, ad Reg. 2, 
xAomcrGs, P/. cxiv. 15, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



*Wo*to, Pf cxiv. 8. 
xptiuv, Pf. cxiv. 4. 
xpwnrr, Pf. cxiv. 22. 
xpiot, Pf cxiv. 9, lo\ 
xvpart, Pf cxiv. 6, 13. 

A. 
*&o7cri, Pf cxiv. 4. 
fcisre, Pf cxiv. 2. 

M. 
(*«4/»^»«ff, Phil, ad Reg. A>, 
fts, PAH. ad Reg. 1 . 
(Atyx, Pf cxiv. 4. 
ptyctX, Pf. CXIV. 19. 

pi*, 2»£f. 1. 

fwrspi, Pf cxiv. 11, 18. 
{AopiA-vpovToii;, Pf. cxiv. 21. 
fuW, P/l cxiv. 3. 
N. 

tO^CTE»f> P/*t7. GC? Pfg. 3. 

o. 

ir, pf cxiv. 6. 

©fyw, PM. aa" P<?g. 4. 
cict, Pf. cxiv. 11, 18. 
cAscdj?, Phil, ad Reg. 1. 
o?v£Wa?j Phil, ad Reg. 5. 
8 has, Phil, ad Reg. 2. 
%ptoc, P/l cxiv. 8, 15. 
5 f , P/. cxiv. 21. 
eVtov, Pf cxiv. 3. 
#t«, P/I cxiv. 1. 
v&, P//z7. ad Reg. 1. 
**, J» Pjf. 3. 

n. 

wcuJU* P/« Cxiv. 1. 
flcapt, jy. Cxiv. 11, 18. 
craa«», P/! cxiv. 10* 
«&&&>$, Pf cxiv. 12. 
cff£pwvy/xov, Phil, ad Reg> 5. 
Wrpj?, P/ cxiv. 22. 
*™y^, P/*. cxiv. 7, 14. 
•ero^io?, P/«7. ad Reg. 5 j J» Fff. 2. 
«roTa^y;, iy*. cxiv. 21. 
«tot», P/*. cxiv. 7, 14. 
«rfo 5> P&7. ad Pfg* 4. 



P. 

jn'ihw, Phil, ad Reg. 3; 
/o9»a, P/". cxiv. 6, 13. 

r. 

<rfe, P/. cxiv. 20. 
ctUo, Pf cxiv. 19. 
c-xufipoTrw, Pf cxiv. 8, 15. 

croQvrccTov, Pf Cxiv. 2. 
crviXciScov, Pf cxiv. 21. 
«ri5y, Pf cxiv. 12. 
e-vptyfh Pf cxiv. 11, 18. 
c<ppiyoumt, P/. cxiv. 9* 

cr<ppt«yo<yvT)9f> P/- CXIV. 10. 
T. 

T£o>, P/^7i at/ Peg. 4. 

T»l&, J«P/f. 1. 

tJ, Pf. cxiv. 17. 
t»/, Pfo7. ad Reg. 1. 
T'wrle, P/I cxiv. 12. 

t^t, p/: cxiv. 15. 

«■», PAz7. ac? Peg. 3. 

tow, P/*i/. ad Peg. 5. 

t^, P^i/. ad Reg, 1 ; InEf.3> 

tote, iy. cxiv. 3. 

rpiuo-a, Pf cxiv. 19. 

Tolas', P/^ cxiv. 20. 

T. 

feTe?, Pf cxiv. 3. 
fytfAss, P/. cxiv. 17. 

V7TCC70V, Pf. CXiv. 20. 

vvl 9 Pf cxiv. 11, 18. 
vrtpov, Phil, ad Reg. 3. 

4>. 

f «»ij?, Iw Pif. 2. 
Quite) In Eff. 4. 
0»?w>, P/. cxiv. 11, 18* 
£fto», /« P^. 3. 
<p*V«£\ P/ cxiv. 5, 12. 
^vA, Pf cxiv. 1. 

X. 

Xt»p», In Pff. 1. 

12. 

*fl, P/«7 # ad Peg. 1. 



VEEBAL INDEX 



Latin words used in milton. 



sibdit, EL v. 78. 
abdita, Ad. Patr. 28. 
abditus, Epit. Da. 52. 
abdu&um. Ad Patr. 75, 
abefle, Ad I. Ro. 49. 
abeft, Ife> &c. 6n 
abhinc, EL iii. 6*4. 
abibam, Epit. Da. 73, 
abigat, ^d J. #0. 36. 
abire, EL iv. 104. 
abiret, jEpi*. Da. 199. 
abis, ^ /. Ho. 69. 
ablata, £/. vii. 76. 
A bra, JEpi*. Da, 176. 
abreptumj £/. vii. 83. Add. 

EL vii. 3. 
abrupto, £/. i. 42. 
abftulit,' £/. iv. 36. 
Academia, EL ii. 21. ;rfoU £/. 

vii. 5. 
Academi, De Iff. P/, 35. 
siccepimus, £/. ii. 6', 
accipe, EL iv. 53. In Qainf* 

Nov. 130. 
accire, £/. ii. ll. 
acer, Nat. ike. 39. 
Achabi, EL iv. 99. 
Achaemeniae* EL i. 65. 
Acheloiades, ^4d Leon. iii. 2. 
Acheronte, In Qui?it. Nov. 7. 
Acherontteo, I« Quint, Nov. 

72. 
Achillei, EL ii. 15. 
acies, EL ii. 11. Ad Patr. 106. 
acres, I«. Qwi/tf. Nov. 222. 
afta, i\ T ar. &c. I. 
Adaea, Ad J. Ro. 60. 
aftus, EL iv. 120. ^rf. Pafr. 

46. 



acuiffe, jE7. iii. 29. 
acumen, Manf. 77* 
adamante, El. vii. 89. Nat* 

Sec. 5. Ad Patr. 23. 
adamantinus, In Quint. NuV6 

38. 
adcitos, In Quint. Nov. 131. 
addere, Ad Patr. 82. 
addideratque, EL vii. 25, 26». 
addidit, Ad Patr. 53. 
addimus, £/. vi. 33. 
addit, In Quint. Nov. 215. 
additur, El. vi. 63. 
addu&um, EL vii. 35. 
aderat, Epit. Da. 12. 
ades, EL v. 86, 88, 94. Epit* 

Da. 208. 
adefdum, Ad Salf. 6. 
adeflet, EL iv. 48. 
adeft, EL v. 6, 7. £p#. £><*. 

92. 
adeunda, Ep. P. JB. iii. 2. 
adhibebit, Ad. J. Ro. 84. 
adhibete, In Quint. Nov. l64. 
adhuc, EL vii. 15* In Quint. 

Nov. 135. Zw 06. Pr. EL 

1,3. 
adiifle, £/> i. 17. 
adituras, De Id, PL 19» 
adivit, Ep. P. B. ii. 5. iUa/j/". 

56, 
adjicere, In. Quint. Nov, 17. 
adjuveris, Ep. P. B. ii. 9. 
adjuvet, £/* v. 74. 
admiffum, Add. EL vii. 6. 
admoram, £/?zY. Da. 157= 
Adoni, EL i. 62. 
adoperta, JS/. v. 25. 
adfit, Manf. 83. 
adulto, EL vi. 55. 
adultum, Manf. 77> 

*a 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



adunco, Epit. Da. 103. 
adufque, Ad Salf. 41. 
adventum, El. v. 28. 
adverfa, In Quint. Nov. 46*. 
adytis, Ad J. llo. 52. 
JEaci, In Ob. Pr. 45. 
aedibus, In Quint. Nov. 121. 
^Egaeam, Nat. &c. 2.3. 
^Egaeona, Nat. &c. 5.9. 
/Egeriain, Ad Salf. 35. 
Mgieli, In Ob. Pr. 20. 
a-gide, El. iv. 111. 
/Egle, £piV. D«. 88. 
/Egon, Epit. Da. 70. 
aegro, ^/r/ Leon. ii. 11. 
^Emathia, Jrc 06. Pr. 12. 
semulus, JManf. 22. 
bolides, £/.'v. 51. 
i^Bolii, Man/: 23. 
yEolon, £/. iv. 6. 
aequa, In Quint. Nov. 198. Ad 

Patr. 110. 
aeqiKTvus, .De /</. 2V. 9. 
aequali, JV«£. &c. 54. 
aequiora, ^</ /. Ko. 83. 
aequo, Man/. 3. 
aquor, £/. iv. 2. Jn Quint. Nov. 

157. 
aequora, A^. &c. 57. Epit. Da. 

162. 
jequofe, EL iii. 33, v. 77. In 

Quint. Nov. 29. 
&quus, Man/. 70. 
aer, ^d Pfl/r. 87- 
aere, El. iv. 118. //* Quint. 

Nov. 12, 45. 
2ere, Man/. 16. 
asrea, i/t Quint. Nov. 173. 
aerei, Na£. &c. 29- 
iL-riibnain, E/. iv. 80. 
ajfculea, ^c/ i^//-. 45. £p#. 

Da. 52. 
iEfonios, £/. ii. 8. Manf.75. 
seftate, £/uf, £>a. 51. 
aeftivum, /« QttZftf. iVor. 180. 
aetas, Add. El. \ ii. 4. ^«/ 7. iio. 

82. 
aetatcm, In Quint } Nov t 2 J 9. 



ceterna, Nat. Sec. 13. 
seternaque, El. iv. 96*. 
ceterna, Jw Quint.' Nov. 139* 
aeternseque, Ad. Patr. 31. 
reternis, Man/'. 7. 
yEternitas, Dc It/. P/. 4. 
asterno, £/. vii. 21. 
asternorum, Ad J. Ro. 54. 
ceternos, In Quint. Nov. 199. 
aeternum, In Ob. Pr. EL 68. 

Nat. &c. 41. Ad Salf. 34. 

Epit. Da. 111. 217. 
reternus, De Id. PL 9. 
sethera, EL iii. 11. Man/. 95. 

Epit. Da. 203, 294. 
aethere, EL vi. 85. 
anherea, EL ii. 14. In Quint, 

Nov. 167. 
setheream, Ep. L B. 2. 
aethereas, Ep. P. B. iii. 12. 
aethereis, Ad Leon. i. 2. 
sethereo, In Quint. Nov. 8. 

Man/. 100. 
acthereos, Ad Patr. 18. Ep?V. 

Da. 206. 
sethereum, Nat. &c. 46. 
a^thereus, [n Quint. Nov, 221. 
/Ethiopas, El. v. 31. 
/Ethon, £/. iv. 33. 
sethra, 77. iii. 60. 
^tnaea, la Ob. Pr. 46. 
/Etnceo, ^d Patr. 49. 
/Etna, 7/j Quint. Nov. 6. 
aevi, Ad Patr. 31. 
a?vo, ^/rf Leo;* ii. 3. ^/?o/. 5 

2va*. &c. 10. Ad Pair. 120. 
a?vum, IWtf. &c. 65. Man/. 25. 

JEpiV. Da. 173. Ad J. jKo. 

24. 
afline, Ad Patr. 63. 
afflata, £/. iii. 19. 
agam, £/. vi. 79, SO. 
agatur, 77. v. 19. 
age, EL v. 137, vi. 7. 
agens, Jd Leon, i. 07. Nat. &c, 

47. 
agglomerata, 7;* Quint i Nov 

177. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



agilis, El. vii. 71. 

agis, Epit. Da. 147. 

agit, EL v. 12. In Quint. Nov. 

225. 
agitabile, Ad Pair. 88. 
agitant, El. v. 38. 
agitata, P/?i£. X)«. 6l. 
agmen, Epit. Da. 24. 
agmina, El. iii. 59. irc Quint. 

Nov. J 74. Pp*Y. £)«. 100. 
agmine, In Quint. Nov, 46. 

Ad J. Ro. 39. 
agni, Epit. Da. 18, 26, 35, 44, 
50, 57, 62, 68, 74, 81, 87y 
93,112,124, 139,161,179. 
agor, El. vii. 58. 
agris, El. iv. Ll6, vi. 19. 
agro, El. iii. 37. ^tf Salf. 30. 
agros, £/. iii. 18, iv. 2, v. 124, 
Ep. P. B. i. 8. i« Quint. 
Nov. 32. £/h*. D«. 58. 
ah, £/. i. 59, 55, v. 75. .4a 7 . 
ico/i. ii. 3. E/>*Y. Da. 142, 
153. 
ait, El. v. 43. Ep. P, B. iii. 

5. Apol. 9. 
aiunt, JE/hY. Da. 83. 
aid, El. v. 69. 
Alauni, Epit. Da. 175, 
alba, El. iii. 56. 
albenti, iVaf. &c. 46. 
albentia, 7« Quint. Nov. 25. 
albis, £/. iv. 87. 
Alciden, Man/. 58. 
Alcinoi, El. iii. 44. 
ales, £/. vii. 93. Ad Ledn. i. 2. 
alentes, ^d P//r. 48. 
algentes. In Salm. 2. 
alii, El. iv. 22. Pp. P. 5. ii. 9. 

£p/f. Da. 190. 
aliena, Epit. Da. 107. 
aligerae, El. iii. 65, 
aliis, P/. vii. 6l. 
alimenta, El. iv. 91. 
alio, Epit. Da. 96, 
alipes, El. ii. 14. 
uliqua, itfon/. 97. 



aliquis, P/. v. 41. 

aliquorf, El. v. 8. 

alis, Ad Pat r. 4. JEJpzV. Da. 188. 

alit, £/. vi. 30. 

aliter, El. iv. 97- 

alium, i)/a/{/l 3. -Epzlf. Da. 

105. 
alligat, Nat. &c. 7. 
allifa, Nat. &c. 97. 
alloquiis, Epit. Da. 47. 
alloquitur, /« Quint. Nov. 200. 
aluiffe, P/. i. 5. 
alluit, £/. i. 9. 

alma, El. i. 82, iv. 26, v. 73. 
almaque, Ad J. Ro. 30. 
Alpes. In Quint. Nov. 
Alpemque, Epit. Da. 114. 
Alphefibaeus,- Epit. Da. 69. 
alta, El. iv. 122, v. 46. Epit. 

Da. 64, 119. Ad. J. Ro. 70. 
altam, Maw/. 22. Epit. Da. 7. 
altari, p/. vii. 97. 
altaria, Man/. 44. 
altera, EL iv. 19, vii. 79. Ad. 

Leon. ii. 1. Ad. Pair. 65, 

Epit. Da. 156. 
alternat, Ad. Salf. 5. 
alterno, Nat. &c. 49. 
alternos, EL 1. 92. 
alti, Ep. P. B. i. 5. 
altis, Ad. Pair. 74. J2/wY. Da. 

42. 
alto, El. iii. 31, v. 117. In. 

Quint. Nov. 220. De Id. PL 

26. 
altus, El. v. 52. 
alumno, £/, iv. 25. In 0&. Pr 

29. 
alumnum, Jlfaw/. 10. 
alumnus, Ad. Salf. 9. 
alunt, £/. iii. 26. 
alvo, In 0b. Pr. 28. 
amabit, Epit. Da. 32. 
amoenitates, In Ob. Pr. EL 67. 
amsenos, Ad. J. Ro. 62. 
amans, El. i. 6, vii. 74, 100, 
amant, Ad. Patr.'Zl. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



amantes, In Quint, Nov. 16. 
amanti, El. i. 33. 
amaror, EL i. 40. 
amat, EL i. 36, vi. 14. 
amata, El. iii, 44. 
Arnathufia, El. vii. 1. 
amatori, EL vii, 22. 
amatos, £/. vii. 87. 
amaturos, E/. vii. 102. 
amavit, Epit. Da, 86. 
ambiguas, In Quint. Nov. 212. 
ambitos, Nat. &c. 38. 
ambo, Epit. Da. 137? 138. 
amborum, ikfaw/1 20. 
ambrofiis, irc Q«wi#. Nov. 136. 
©mica, EL i. 64. 
arnica, Nat. &c. 43. 
amici, EL I 91. Man/, 15, 63. 

^tf. J. Ho. 69. 
amicire, In Salm. 4. 
amico, Ad. J. Ro. l6l 
amicos, In Quint. Nov. 13. 
amiclu, EL iii. 57. 
ami&us, /« Quint. Nov. 131. 
amicum, Man/. 78. £/»7. Z^c, 

16, 96. 
aimffos, EL iii. 12. 
amiffum, EL vii. 81. EpY. -Dtf. 

16. 
arane, E/. i. 4. ^i J. Ro. 36. 
amcen&, ^4d Leon. iii. 5. 
amceni. £/. v. 109. 
amoma, EL v. 6'0. 
Amor, EL i. 60, iv. 70, vi, 52, 

vii. 4, 17. Epit. Da. 191. 
amor, EL i. 12. 36, v. 76 , vi, 7- 

Epif. Da. 13, 78. 
Arnore, £/. vii. 20. 
amore, EL i. 42. Ad Leon. 

ii. 2. 
amorem, Epit. Da. 85. 
Amores, EL vii. 85. 
amores, E/. v. 67, 71? 95. 

Maw/ 2. 
amoris, EL vii. 93. 
ampla, Epit. Da. 172. 
amulaque, In Quint. Nov, 176. 



Amphiaraus, EL vii. 84. 
Amphitryoniaden, I/j Quint, 

Nov. 28. 
amplexa, E/. iii. 6l. 
amplexus, EL v. 56. In Quint 

' Nov. 69. 
Amyntas, Epit. Da. 70. 
Amyntorides, EI. iv. 27. 
augelus, Ad Leon. i. 1. 
angit, EL i. 12. 
Angli, In Quint. Nov. 197. 
Anglia, In Quint. Nov. 122. 
Angliacas, In Quint, Nov. 211. 
Angliaco, EL iii. 4, iv. 52. 
Anglica, In Quint. Nov. 4. 
Angligenum, Ad J. Ro. 32. 
Anglos, In Quint. Nov. 128. 
anguis, EL vii. 46. 
anguiferos, ^d Pair. 107. 
Anguillae, /» 06. Pr. EL 14. 
anhela, ^o 7 Salf. 13. 
animce, E/. iv. 19, 96. Ep. 

P. B. iii. 1. 
animalia, EL iii. 25. 
anirnam, EL iii. 30. 
animas, EL iv. 45. X><? Jo 7 . P/» 

19. JSpif. £>a. 23, 107, 198, 

205. 
animat'que, In Ob. Pr. EL 37. 
animo, EL iii. 2. ^yW. 10, 

Ad. Pair. 114. 
animos, EL iv. 105. J» Qtwtf. 

Nov. 99. 
animus, EL v. 19. 
aula, EL ii. 13. 
annis, EL iv. 125, 
anno, In Quint. Nov. 226. 
annoriimque, Nat. &c. 13, 

J/fl///*. 86. 
annos, Ad Patr. 11 6. 
annosa, Epit. Da. 169. 
annua, E/. v. 103. 
annua?, ^/rf Sa//". 37. 
Antichrifti, In Salm. H. 6. 
antiqua, Man/. 42. Epit. Dq, 

128. Ad J. Ro. 72. 
antique, EL iv. If. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



antiquis, El. iv. 11 6. 
antiftes, In Quint. Nov. 156. 
antra, EL iii. 26, v. 17, vi. 70. 

Epit. Da. 5. 
antri, In Quint. Nov. 151. 
antro, De Id. PL 4. Ad Patr. 

15, 49. 
antrum, In Quint, Nov. 152. 

153. Man/. 60. 
anxia, EL iv. 105, 
Aoniae, Ad Patr. 75. 
aonidum, Ad J.Ro. 21. 
Aoniis, EL vi. 17. 
Aonios, EL iv. 29. 
Apenninus, In Quhit. Nov. 

50. 
aperto, In Quint. Nov. 113. 
apex, Nat, &c. 30. 
Apolline, I/i 06. Pr. 29. 
Apollinea, ^ /. Ro. 35. 
Apollo, is/, vi. 34. Manf. 57- 
apparat, In Salm. 5. 
apparent. In Quint. Nov. 2(?. 
aptd, EL v. 107. 
aptius, Ad Patr. 8. 
aptos, Ad Patr. 58. 
aquas, EL v. 80. De Id, PL 

20. £j»f. Da. 149. 
aquae, EL iii. 22. 
Aquilo, Nat. &c. 55. 
aquis, EL iii, 32, v. 82. Nat. 

&c. 65. E/>^. Da. 53. 
Arabum, EL iv. 99, v. 59. 

E/wf. Da, 186. 
Aracyntho, In Quint. Nov. 65, 
aras, Ad Patr. 26. 
arbitraris, In Ob. Pr. EL 31. 
arbore, Ad Patr. 45. 
arborea, EL v. 134. 
arboribus, EL v. 123. 
arbutus, Epit. Da. 72. 
arcana, Ad. Patr. 24. 
arcani, De Id, PL 33. 
arcano, El. v. 11. 
arce, El. ii. 14. In Quint. Nov. 

53, 168, 181. 
arceat, Epit. Dn. 25, 



arces, Ep. P. B. iii. f. Nat, 

&c. 16. 
archetypus, De Id. PL 22, 
arcis, EL iv. 113. 
ar&is, EL vi. 7. 
Ardo, I» Quint. Nov. 1. Ma/*/; 

28. 
Ar&oas, EL v. 32. 
Ar&oi, Ad Chr. 2. 
arcum, £/, vii. 35. Epit. D$* 

204. 
arcus, EL vii. 95. 
ardentes, EL v. 86. 
ardere, E/>#. Da. 197. 
ardua, £/. v. 15, 6\. In Quint* 

Nov. 172, 180. 
area, Ad Patr. 69. 
arena, EL iii. 46. 
arenas, EL iv. 13. 
arenofam, EL iv. 120. 
areolas, ^/?o/. 4. 
aret, ApoL 6. 
argentea, EL iii. 45. 
argenteus, Man/. 32. 
arguitur, EL iv. 59. 
argumento, Epit. Da. 184. 
arguta, EL vi. 38. J» Quint* 

Nov, 213. £/>#. Da. 148. 
arida, Ad Patr. 11. 
Arionii, ^c? Patr. 60. 
Ariftoride, In Quint. Nov. 185. 
arm a, EL iv. 74. vii. 9 . 1. 

B, 3. Epff. Da. 167, 192. 
armat, In Quint. Nov. 14. 
armata, In Quint. Nov. 146. 
armiferos, Nat. &cc. 54. 
armis, EL iv. 107, 109- Ad, 

Chr. 4. 
Armoricos, E/>#. Da. l65. 
armorum, Dj Quint. Nov. 39* 
Ami, Epit, Da. 129. 
arridentem, Man/. l6\ 
arripui, £/?z'r. Da. 146, 
arfit, EL vii. 91. 
arte, EL ii. 10, vi. 40. Ep. P. 

J5. ii. 9. In Quint. Nov. 42. 
artes, EL vi. 33. /« Quint, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Nov. 83. Ad Pair. 63. Epit. 

Da. 34. 
artefque, Epit. Da. 152, 153. 
artibus, In Ob. Pr. 38. 
artis, In Salm. II. 3. Epit. Da. 

1S3. 
Arturo, Epit. Da. 1 66. 
Arturumque, Manf. 81. 
artus, In Quint Nov. 92. Manf. 

39p 
arundiferum, £/. i. 11. 
arundine, EL v. 113. JE/mY. 

Da. 104. 
arva, £/. i. 13, iv. 76, v. 31. 

J?2 Quint. Nov. 25. JEpxV. 

JDc 63. 
Arviragumque, Epit. Da. 164. 
A fide, In Quint. Nov. 170. 
Afopus, In Quint. Nqv. 66. 
afpera, EL v. 136. Epit, Da. 

109. 
afpernabere, Man/. 2J. 
afpice, El. v. 67. 
afpicit, In Quint. Nov. 32. 
affiduis, Epit. Da. 5. 
aflinjilare, IVatf. &c. 6. 
jaffueta, £;;/£. Da. 15. 
aitUeto, ^/?o/. 6. 
affuefcere, ./4(Z -Lcott. i. 8. 
affumptaqae, Epit. Da. 167. 
^(Tumptis, I« Quint. Nov. 80. 
Affyrios, P/. iv. 114. Manf. 

P. 

Aflyrius, De Id. P/. 29. 

aftantem, £/. vii. 18. 

aftanti, Manf. 88. 

^ftaret, iWaw/! 87- 

aftat, E/. iii. 5:3. 

aftitit, In Quint. Nov. 80. 

tfjra, £/. i. 77, iv. 94. JKp. P. 

n:ii.6, iv.3. InObi.Pr. El. 

48. u44 Pa*/\ 34. Epit. Da. 

123. 
aftris, /« Quint. Nov. 22, 173, 

Tto. &c. 33. 
aftrum, P/>*7. Do. 78, 79. 
atfrvps, #e /</. Fl. 30. 



ater, In Q ?«'/?£. Nov. 145. J2p#> 

Da. 142. 
Atbos, In Quint. Nov. 174. 
Atlante, De Id. PL 24. 
Atlantiique, Manf 72. 
Atlas, y4d Pa.tr. 40. 
atra, Zw 0/;. Pr. EL 32. 
atria, £/. i. 88. v. 37. £/>> 

P. £. i. 5. Irc Quint. Nov. 

176. 
Atridoe, EL ii. 16. 
atris, In Ob. Pr. 39. 
atrium, In Ob. Pr. EL 64. 
atrocem, In Quint. Nov. 2S. 
atros, In Quint. Nov. 126. Ad 

Salf 33. 
attamen, In Quint. Nov. 220. 
attonitis, EL vii. 14. 
attonito, Nat. &c. 28. 
attonitos, In Quint. Nov. 66* 

In 0b. Pr. EL 25. 
attulerat, EL vii. 14. 
attulit, Ad J. Ro. 4. 
atrum, In Quint. Nov. 153. 
auctaque, EL vii. 55. 
audacibus, Ad Pair. 4. 
audebitis, Ad Pair. 11 6. 
audet, Nat. &c. 5. 
audibit, In Quint. Nov. 124. 
audire, Epit. Da. 132. 
audis, Ad. Salf. 26. Epit. Da, 

209, 
audiffe, J» 06. Pr. £/. 25. 
auditur, El. i. 29. 
auditurque, El.'iv. 121, vi. 39. 
audivi, In 0b. Pr. EL 45. 
auget, J« Q?«»if. JViw, 193. 
auc;ur, El. iii. 25, vi. 66. De 

Id. PL 26. 
aula, EL i. 46. Nat. &c. 21. 
aulac, In Quint. Nov. 137- 
aulam, £/, vi. 73. Adj. Ro. 46. 
aura, EL iii. 47, 48, v. 90. In. 

Ob. Pr. EL 26. Manf. 4. 
auram, Nat. &c. 64. 
auras, In Quint. Nov. 11 9, 

16J,2Q§. InOb.rr.El.W. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



auratis, Ad Pair. 32. 
aurato, EL vii. 47. 
auratos, EL iii. 55. 
aurea, EL i. 60, iii. 66, v. 32, 

135. ^d Lea/*, ii. 6. Ad 

Pair. 14, 27, 70. Epif. £>a. 

23. 
aureis, In Ob. Pr. EL 58. 
aurem, Ad Salf. 5. 
aures, Ad Pair. 53, 72. 
auribus, In Quint. Nov. 182. 
auriga, In Ob. Pr. EL 50. 
auro, EL iii. 7, iv. 33, v. 110, 

vi. 37. 
auroque, EL i. 79* 
Aurora, El. v. 49. 
Auroram, E/.vi. S8. Epit. Da. 

189- 
aufa, Man/. 29- 
aufis, I«. Quint. Nov. 221. 
Aufoniae, I/i Quint Nov. 49. 
Aufonias, A/a??/. 12. Ad J. 

Ro.7. 
Aufoniis, EL i. 70. 
Aufter, EL iv. 36. Epit. Da. 

48. 
Auftriaci, Ad Pair. 94. 
aufus, Ep. P. B. i. 2. Epit. 

Da. 133. 
author, E/. vii. 38. 
authorefque, In Quint. Nov, 

215. 
authorum, Ad. J. Ro. 71 • 
avaritiam, Apol. 11. 
Averni, EL ii. 17. 
avertunt, EL iv. 67. 
aves, E/. v. 70. 
Aventino, In Quint. Nov. 109- 
avos, EL i. 46. 
avia, In Quint. Nov. 21. Nat. 

&c.2. 
avidas, Ma;./. 1 9. 
avid os, Epit. Da. 42. 
avis, £?. iii. 24. Epit, Da. 

187. 
avitas, ^d Pair. 93, 



avitum, J« 06. Pr. 27* 

avium, EpY. Da. 76. 

axe, E/. vi. 25. Ep. I. B. 2, 

Maw/. 26. Epit. Da. 51. 
axis, EL v. 92. 



B. 



Babylonius, In Quint. Not, 

156. 
bacchantur, Epit. Da. 21 9. 
Bacchum, E/. vi. 14. 
Bacchus, EL vi. 14. 
baculo, EL ii. I . 
Balearica, Nat. &c. 59. 
balfama, Epit. Da. 186. 
barba, In Quint. Noiu 81. 
barbara, EL i. 32. I;* Qw/tf. 

Nov. 95. 
barbaricos, ^o* Pajfr. 84. 
barbitoque, Ad J. Ro. 9. 
barbitos, EL vi. 37. 
barathri, In Ob. Pr. 36. 
barathro, Nat. &c. 30. Manf. 

65. 
bafia, In Quint. Nov. 112. 
Baucidis, Epit. Da. 88. 
beatam, In Quint. Nov. 31, 
beatas, Epit. Da. 218. ^0" / 

Ro. 76. 
beatum, Ad Pair. 76. Ad Salf. 

34. 
Belinum, Epit. Da. 164. 
Belgia, EL iii. 12. 
bella, EL iv. 72, 121, vi. 55, 

vii. 6. Nat. &c. 32. Manf. 81. 
belli, E/. iv. 83. 
bellipotens, Ad Chr. 1. 
belligeros, In Quint. Nov. 128. 
bellis, In Quint. Nov. 113. 
bello, In Quint. Nov. 29. 
bellua, Ep. P. B. ii. 2. 
Belon, De Jo 7 . P/. 31. 
bene, E/. vi. 9. Ep. P, B< i\, 

10. 3to/ 79* 



VERBAL INDEX, 



bibet, EL iv. 110. 
bibiffe, EL iv. 38. 
Biblia, EL iv. 44. 
bifidi, EL iv. 30. 
bifidoque, Ad J. Ro. 66. 
bifidumque, EL v. 9. 
bilemque, In Ob. Pr. EL 28. 
bilinguis, In Quint. Nov. 141. 
bilis, Epit. Da. 71 '. 
bin a, Epit. Da. 183. 
Bionis, Epit. Da. 2. 
bis, Epit. Da. 9, 86. 
bifque r £/. iv. 35, 36. 
blanda, EL vii. 1. Man/. 63. 
blanditiae, Ep. Da. 91. 
blanditiafque, EL v. 70. 
bombis, In Quint. Nov. 178. 
bone* Epit. Da. 147. 
bono rum, Man/. 94. 
bonum, /« Quint. Nov. 195. 
bonus, /« <S'a/#z. 4. Man/. 27 . 

Ad. J. Ro. 77. 
Bootes, Jw 0*. Pr. EL 51. £/. 

v. 35. 
Booten, Man/. 37. 
brachia, In Ob. Pr. EL 53. 
Brennumque, Epit. Da. l64. 
breve, EL v. 48. 
brevibus, EL vi. 22. 
Britanna?, Jrc 06. Pr. EL 9. 
Britanne, Ep. P. B. iii. 5. 
Britanni, In Quint. Nov. 96. 
Britannica, Ad J. Ro. 8. 
Britannis, EL i. 71- 
Britannos, E/>. P. J3. i. 1. i» 

Quint. Nov. 202. 
Britonam, Man/. 84. 
Britonnicum, jEpi/. Da. 171. 
Britonum, Epit. Da. l65. 
Bromiique, In Quint. Nov. 

64. 
Biornius, In Quint. Nov. 64. 
brumalem, Man/. 37- 
brumaque, EL v. 139* 
brutos, Ep. B. B. ii. S. 
bubulcos, Mat{f. 59- 
bufto, In Ob. Pr. EL 43. 



cacumen, EL v. 9. 

cacumina, //« Quint. Nov. 13$. 

cadat, £/. iv. 105. 

cadavera, In Quint. Nov. 144, 

cad it, EL i. 42. 

cado, £/. vi. 32. 

caeca, £/. v. 20. Ep. I. B. u 

Ad Leon. ii. 9. 
caeci, El. i. 85. In Quint. Noil. 

59. 
caecis, In Quint. Nov. 216. 
caecitas, De Id. PL 25. 
caeeos, In Ob. Pr. EL 27. 
caedes, EL v. 39 In Quint* 

Nov. 203. 
caelato, EL vi. 37- 
caelaverat, Epit. Da* 184. 
caelicolum, Manf. 95. 
caementa, In Quint. Nov. 143, 
casrula, EL v. 82. 
casruleae, In Quint. Nov. 24. 
caeruleamque, EL iv. 7. 
caeruleum, Epit. Da. 188. 
caeruleumque, Nat. &c. 50, 
Caefar, Irc Quint. Nov. 97. 
casfe, i>* Ob. Pr. 28. 
caefo, Ad Salm. 25. 
csetera, £/. v. 96, vii. 43. Ad 

Leon. 10. 
caeteraque, EL i. 11, 
calcabit, Irc Quint. Nov. 111. 
calceis, Jra Quint. Nov. 85. 
Calchanta, £/. vi. 69. 
Caledoniis, In Quint. Nov. 4. 
Caledonio, Man/. 48. 
calet, EL vii. 12. 
caligine, In Quint. Nov. 139- 
callebat, Epit. Da. 76. 
callidus, Irc Quint. Nov. lit. 
callo, u4</ /. Ro. 42. 
calor, El.\i. 46. 
calthaeque, i» 06. Pr. 4>6. 
caluere, In Quint. Nov. l63. 
Calumnia, In Quint. Nov. 140. 

Ad Pair. 107. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Cami, EL i. 89. 
Camoena, Ad Salf 7. 
Camoenae, Man/. 4. 
camcenam, El. vi. 3. 
Camcenas, Ad Pair. 67 ' > 
Camcenis, Epit. Da. 170. 
campo, In Ob. Pr. 48. 
campos, El. iii. 45, iv. 75. 
Camum, El. i. 11. 
canat, El. v. 28. 
Candida, £/. iii. 55. J5p#. -D«* 

200. 
candidiora, El. ii. 55. 
cane, El. vi. 58. 
canebant, Manf. 43- 
canebat, ^d Patfr. 46. 
canendo, ^c? Par>. 54. 
canentem, Ad Leon. ii. 5. 
canentum, In Quint. Nov. 62. 
cani, In Quint. Nov. 196. 
canimus, El. vi. 81. 
Canis, In Quint. Nov. 180. 
canis, In Quint. Nov. 80. 
canifque, In Quint. Nov, 118. 
caniftris, Mavf. 39. 
canit, JEJ. vi. 28, 57. .Maw/. 

11. £pz>. Da. 143. 
cannabeo, Jrc Quint. Nov. 84. 
canorum, ^4c? PaYr. 59- Epit* 

Da. 34. 
cantabit, In Salm. H. 8. 
eantabitur, El. v. 23. 
cantantes, Ira Quint. Nov. 65. 
cantavit, El. vi. 22. 
cantus, Ad Pair. 52. Epit. 

Da. 218. 
cantu, El. v. 115. ^4<f Leow. 

ii. 12, iii. 8. Ad Salf. 32. 

Manf. 44. 
cantuque,.E/.iii.60. Epit.DaA3. 
canunt, Ep. Da. 73. 
cape, El. i. 91, iii. 63. 
caper, £/. v. 122. 
capi, El. v. 130. 
capiens, Ad Pair. 73. 
capillis, In Quint. Nov. 73. 
capijlos, El. i. 59, v. 63, 65. 



capit, Epit. Da. 17, 52. 
capiulis, In Salm. 10. 
captabis, El. v. 85. 
captat, Itt Quint. Nov. 183* 
capti, J« Quint. Nov. 222. 
captum, J/* Quint. Nov. 71. 
captus, ^4po/. 3. 
caput, £/. i. 6, 74, iii. 56. Ep„ 

P. B. i. 7. I« Qwin*. Nov. 

182. JVa*. &c. 12. De Id a 

PL 23. £pzf. Da. 60, 215. 
carcere, £/. iv. 5. 
carcerem, 1?j 06. Pr. El. 46. 
cardinalitium, In Salm. H. 8. 
carentia, In Quint. Nov. I89. 
carere, EL iv. 22, vi. 2. 
caritura, Ep. P. B. iii. 10. 
carmen, El. vi. 14. Jo 7 Patr. 

6, 17, 21. Epit.Da.3. 
carmina, EL v. 5, 114, vi. 14, 

19,35. Ad Patr, 26, 33, 41, 

115. Manf.'i. 80. 
carmine, £/. vi. 5, 6. In Quint. 

Nov. 194, 197. Ad. Patr. 

24, 54. Mfln/. 12, 69. 
carminibus, Manf. 46. 
carne, EL iv. 76. 
earned, In Ob. Pr. EL 37- 
carpere, Epit. Da. 131. 
carpes, Manf. 53. 
caruhTe, Ep*Y. Da. 118. 
caruifti, £/. v. 43. 
Cafpia, In Quint, Nov. 20. 
caflefque, In Quint. Nov. 19. 
Caffibelauni, Epit. Da. 149- 
cafiide, El. i. 30. iVaf. &c. 40. 
cafta, EL iv. 63, vi. 63. 
Caftalio, El. iv. 32. 
Caftalis, EL v. 9- 
caiuque, In Quint. Nov. 125. 
cafus, Nat. &c. 25. 
cater va, In Quint. Nov. 64. 
catervae, Ad Patr. 101. 
cathedram, fa Quint. Nov. 94. 
catillo, £/, vi. 6l. 
catus, El. i. 29. 
caufam, £fc Qwiwf. A r op. 169. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



cava, EL v. 1 06. 

cava, In Quint. Nov. 67- 

cecidiffet, In Ob. Pr. El. 24. 

cecidit, Nat. &c. 24. 

cecinilti, Ep. P. B. iii. 9- 

Cecropiofque, Epit. Da. 56. 

cedentes, In Quint. Nov. 208. 

cedit, EL vii. 37, 

ccdite, EL i. 63, 65, Epit. Da. 

160. 
celavit, JVaf . &c. 64. 
celeberque, Ad J. Ro. 24. 
celebrabitur, Manf. 50. 
celebratior, In Quint. Nov. 

226. 
celebrantur, In Quint. Nov, 

130. 
celebremus, El. v. 29. 
celer, EL ii. 12. 
celeres, EL iv. 9, v, 44. Apol, 

8. Jrc Qwinf. JVov. 209. 
celeri, EL v. 120. In Quint, 

Nov. 160. 
celfum, De Id. PL 23. 
cenfus, Ad Pair. 12. 
centum, Jrc Salm. H, 4. 
Cephalgia, £/. iii. 67 . 
cepit, £/. i. 64. Ad Leon. ii. 1. 
Ceraunia, Nat. &c. 31. 
cerea, Epit. Da. 135. 
Cerealibus, J« Quint. Nov. 32. 
cereaque, J» Quint. Nov. 5$. 
Ceres, £/. v. 126, vi. 34. 
Cereque, EL vi. 51. 
cernjs, Ad Chr. 3. 
certa, Manf. 94. 
certantem, Epit. Da. 132. 
certaque, Ad Patr. 73* 
certas, £/. vii. 28. 
certatim, Ad Salm. 30. 
certe, EL v. 43, vii. Q5. Ad 

Leon. i. 5. Epit. Da. 27,121, 

199- 
certis, Nat. &c, 11. 
certius, £/. vii. 34. 
certoque, Nat. &c. 34. 
certum, In 0b. Pr. 8, 



cefpite, In 0b. Pr. EL 4?. 
ceffiffe, I» 06. Pr. EL 11. 
ceffiflit, £/. i. 23. 
ceflit, £/. vii. 32. Ad Leon* 

ii. 2. 
Ceftrenfis, EL i. 3. 
cetarium, In Salm. 8. 
cete, iVta. &c. 59. 
ceu, I« QwVtf, Nov. 20. 
Chalcidicae, EpzY. Da. 182. 
Chalcidico, Ad Leon. iii. 4. 
Chao, I« 06. Pr. EL 34. 
Chaonis, £/. iv. 26. 
chaos, Ad Pair. 4>7- 
chara, EL iv. 42. Mm?/. 15. 
chare, EL i. 1. Ad. Patr. Ill, 
chari, ^rf Patr. 77, 
charior, EL iv. 23. 
charis, Ad Salf. 31. Epit. Da, 

127. 
charo, Ira 0b. Pr. El. 5 Ad 

Pair. 62. 
Charontis, In 0b. Pr. 35. 
charta, El. i. 2. ^ P^r. 13 . 
chartaeque, In Salm. 5. 
chartis, Manf. 7 , 
charus, Manf. 72. 
chelys, EL vi. 38. 
Chironis, Manf. 60. 
Chlori, EL iv. 35. 
Chloris, El. iii. 44. Epit. Da* 

90, 
chorea, El. vi. 44. 
choreilque, Epit. Da. 218. 
choro, EL v. 120, vi. 18. Dc 

Id. PL 28. Manf. 2. 
choros, £/. i. 52. In Quint, 

Nov. 225. Ad Patr. 52. 

Epit. Da. 85. 
Chrifli, EL vi. 87. 
Chrifticolas, El. iv. 18. 
Chriftina, Ad Chr. 2. 
cibos, El. vi. 60. 
cicutae, .E/nY. Da. 135. 
cicutis, £/. vi. 89. Epit, Da, 

157, 
ciere, EL ii. 2. ^c? P<tfr. 22* 



VERBAL INDEX, 



ciet, In Quint. Nov. 12. 
ciliis, EL vii. 70. 
Cilix, El. iv. 102. 
Cimbrica, EL iv. 16. 
cimmeriis, In Quint. Nov. 60. 
cinda, EL i. 82. £/. v. 110. 

Add. EL vii. 8. 
cin&um, In Quint. Nov. 1S2. 
cin&us, In Quint. Nov. 24. 

Epit. Da. 215. 
cineracea, In Quint. Nov. 81. 
cineres, EL iv. 94. In Quint. 

Nov. 120. .Ma/// 4. 
cineri, M<w/. 86. 
cingi, EL iv. 73. 
cingit, E/. v. 6'2. 
cingunt, Manf. 44. 
cinis, Epif. jDa. 142. 
cinnamed, El. v. 69. 
cinxerat, E/. iii. 56. 
Circes, £/. i. 87. 
circinat, Ad Pair. 35. 
circurn, EL iv. 75, v. 37, vi. 

39, 89. P« Quint. Nov. 178. 

^rf Patfr. 100. Epit. Da. 

101, 184, 194. 
circumfufum, In Quint. Nov. 

157. 
circumgreditur, In Quint. Nov. 

55. 
circumfonat, EL iv. 83, 
circumftrepit, Nat. &c. 57. 
circumvolat, Jw Quint. Nov, 

148. 
circumplexa, JVaf. &c. 68. 
Cirrha, /« Ob. Pr. 31. 
cithara, ^/d Pa/r. 54. 
citharse, Manf. 60. 
citharaeque, £7?^. Da. 89. 
Cithaeron, In Quint. Nov. 67. 
citimumve, De Id. PL 18. 
cito, In Ob. Pr. EL 45. 
civis, EL iv. 103. 
civium, Ad J. Ro. 29. 
■cladis, EL iii. 3. 
cladifque, Iw Ob. Pr. EL 7. 
clamant, EL v» 105, 



clamavit, £/. vi. 17. 

clamoribus, ^ Pa£r. 72« 

clamofos, Manf. 59. 

clara, £/. iv. 16, 118. 

claraque, Ad Leon. iii. 2« 
Ma«/. 51. 

clarique, EL iii. 9. 

clarus, El. iv. 17. ^t/ /. Ro> 
57. 

clafiem, In Quint. Nov. 102. 

claudebam, Epit. Da. 141. 

claudebat, In Quint. Nov. 77* 

Claudii, In Salm. 6. 

claudis, EL 1. 75. 

claudos, EL vi. 8. 

claudum, Ad Salf. 1. 

clauia, EL iv. 95. 

claufus, In Quint. Nov. 36. 

clavis, In Quint. Nov. 101. 

clientes, In Salm. 9. 

Cliniadi, EL iv. 24. 

Clio, Ad Patr. 14. 

Clioque, El. iv. 31. 

Clius, Manf. 24. 

clivofo, EL v. 79. 

Cnidon, El. i. 83. 

coa&a. EL i. 92. 

ccelefte, El. v. 35. 

coeleiti, El. vi. 81. 

cceleflive, El. iv. 45. 

cceli, El. v. 15. Ad Leon. I. 5. 
Ep. P. P. i. 5, ii. 1, 10. It* 
Quint. Nov. 98, 180. JVafc, 
&c. 24, 47, 68. De Id. PI 
17. Ad Patr. 18, 32. Epit, 
Da. 207. 

ccelicoiaB, Epit. Da. 211. 

ccelifugam, El. vi. 10. 

coelique, X>e Id. PL 6. 

ccelo, £/. i. 77y iv. 93, v. 131. 
Ad Patr. 86*, 87- In Ob. Pr. 
El. 35. Manf. 57. Epit. Da. 

19. 

coelos, In Quint. Nov. 166. 

Nat. &c. 38. 
ccelum, £/. vi. 55 , vii. 81. £/>, 

P. J5. ii. 7. In Ob, Pr, EL 



VERBAL INDEX. 



49. Nat. &c. 15. Ad Pair. 

86. 
ccena, Ad Pair. 43. 
coercebat, In Ob. Pr. El. 57- 
coercet, Ad Patr. 23. 
coerulei, Ad J. Ro. 19. 
cogar, El. iv. 20. 
cogis, El. iv. 90. 
cogit, Nat. &c. 46. 
cogitat, In Salm. 4. 
cognatas, Ad Patr. 63: 
cogrritas, Ad Salf. 15. 
cohors, In Quint. Nov. 202. 
cohortes, El. iv. 117. 
colamque, El. vi. 5. 
Colchis, El. iv. 10. 
colende, In Ob. Pr. 41. 
colimus, Manf. 38. 
colit, El. vi. 84. Epit. Da. 203. 

^rf J. Jio. 64. 
colitis, Zrc Ob. Pr. 4. 
colla, Irc Quint. Nov. 111. 
collaque, £/. i. 57. 
co lie, Jrc Qwm£. Nov. 109. 
colles, ^tf 7 &*(/*. 28. 
collibus, El. vi. 17. Manf. 68. 
colligit, Iw 06. Pr. El. 36. 
collimat, Epit. Da. 196. 
Colni, Epit. Da. 149- 
coloni, Apol. 9. 
colonis, El. i. 73. 
colonorum, v4</ Salf. 37. 
colonos, JE^sY. Da. 164. 
colonus, Epit. Da. 54. 
colore, Nat. &c. 48. 
coluere, El. vi. 10. 
coluiffe, £;>#. Da. 33. 
columbas, £/. vii. 5. 
columbis, £/. i. 81. 
colunt, El. i. 66. 
.comans, El. iv. 79* 
comas, £/. v. 86. Manf. 93. 

£/»*. Da. 175. 
comes, £/. vii. 40. De Id. PI. 

6. Epit. Da. 38. 
comitante, El. iii. 1. 
conut&tam, £1. iv. 7. 



comitataque, 2s/. vi. 43* 
comitem, El. iii. 60. JJ Pair* 

76. 
commaduiffe, El. vi. 54. 
commemoret, De Id PL 30* 
commendat, Ad Patr. 19. 
comminuere, Epit. Da. 28, 
commifit, Ad Patr. 98. 
commune, Ad Patr. 77» 
communior, De Id PL 13. 
compage, Epit. Da. 158. 
compeicit, Ad Patr. 38. 
compita, In Quint. Nov. 224* 
comple&itur, Nat. &c. 50. 
componi, Manf. 90. 
componis, Ad Patr. 58. 
compofito, El. vi. 36. 
compofitos, In Quint. Nov. 77 '• 

Epit. Da. 122. 
compofuiffe, Ad Leon. ii. 10. 
compulit, Ad Pair. 55. 
conamina, In Quint. Nov. 168. 
conari, In Salm. H. 2. 
concedat, Manf. 78. 
concepit, In Quint. Nov. 19* 
conceffa, EL iii. 27. 
concefiit, EL iv. 77- 
concha, Nat. &c. 57. 
concitaque, is7. v. 11. 
concordia, Manf. 6. 
concubitu, In Mor. 1. 
concutiat, El. iv. 106. 
condendi, Ad Patr. 70. 
condiderant, El. iii. 36. 
condis, Ad Salf. 22. 
condita, EL vi. 32. 
conditione, 2s7. i. 20. 
confer, Ad Patr. 93. 
confidis, In Quint. Nov. 193. 
confinibus, In Quint. Nov. 184. 
conjuge, El. iv. 41, v. 11 7. 
conjungere, In Quint Nov. 159- 
conjunxerat, In Quint. Nov. 4„ 
conjurata, In Quint. Nov. 202. 
conicia, El. i. 44. In Quint, 

Nov. 150. JW. &c. 65. 
conGlix, In Quint. Nov* 164* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



eonfilium, In Quint. Nov. Il6. 

Nat. &c. 7- 
confiftit, In Quint. Nov. 53. 
confpergere, In Qnint. Nov. 

129- 
confpicienda, EL i. 74, viL 64. 
confpicuae, EL i. 79« 
conf'picuos, Ad Pair. $1. 
confpicuus, EL ii. 1. 
confortia, Ep. P. B. ii. 5. 
conftabitque, Epit. Da. 29- 
confulit, EL v. 128. Ad Patr. 

29. 
confulta, Et. vi. 57- 
confuluit, JVaf. &c. 34. 
contemners, ^d Ptt^t^ 56. 
conteratrixque, In Quint. Nov. 

42* 
eontendite, In Quint. Nov. 

160. 
contermina, EL iii. 21. 
contigerit, Ad Patr. 62. 
contingant, El. iii. 68. 
continuiffe, £/. vii. 60. 
contra, Nat. &c. 17- 
contra&a, Nat. &e. 10. 
contundere, In Quint. Nov. 

107. 
convenere, In Quint, Nov. 

121. 
convenit, EL i. 14. 
conveniunt, EL vii. 6. 
convertunt, Epit. Da. 67. 
convexi, In Quint. Ncv. 98. 

Nat. &c. 20. 
convivia, Ad Patr. 44. 
convocat, EL v. 118. 
coquit, jBpzV. Da. 77, 
Corallaeis, EL vi. 19. 
coram, EL vii. 88. 
corda, EL vi. 34, vii. 44, 73, 

Ad Leon. i. 7. 
cordatior, «4d j". #0. 82. 
corde, Ad Leon. ii. H» 
cordi, ^rf 6W/; 7. 
Corineida, Man/. 46. 
cornea, £/, iv. 119, 



cornu, iVof. &c. 49. 

cornua, EL v. 99. Ep. P. B, 

iii. 4. Ad Patr. 27. 
corond, Ep. P. B. iii. 3. £jwf. 

Da. 215. 
coronatur, £/. v. 6l. 
Coronides, EL ii. 10. 
coronis, Ad Patr. 32. 
corpora, EL v. 90. ^ £eo«. 

iii. 4. I/i Quint. Nov. 104, 

206. 
corpore, £/. v. 16. 
corpori, Ad Salf. 18. 
corpus, De Id. PL 19. 
corrumpere, In Quint. Nov, 

18. 
cortice, Epit. Da. 180. 
Corus, Nat. &e. 53. 
corufca. £/. v. 100. Epit. Da. 

192. 
corufcat, El. vii. 55. .Naf. &c. 

41. 
corylos, £p?*f. Da. 69. 
corymbos, EL vi. 15. 
coftodia, In Quint. Nov. 101* 
crapula, El. vi. 42. 
cratibus, Epit. Da. 141. 
creata, £/. vii. 89. 
creatos, In Quint. Nov. 117. 
crebra, In Quint. Nov. 4<7, 
credam, Epit. Da. 45. 
crede, EL i. 5, v. 91, vi. 6l, 

43, vii. 91. £jp. P. J5. ii. 

10. 
credimus, Man/. 31. 
' credite, -4 a 7 Leon. i. 1. 
creditur, El. i. 81, iv. 82, v* 

104. £/?. I. B. 3. 
credula, Jtfd Leon. iii. 1. 
cremabit, /« Quint. Nov. 110* 
cremata, £/. iii. 10. 
Creontis, EL i. 46. 
crepufcula, EL v. 119- In 

Quint. Nov. 54. £/»7. Da. 6l. 
crefcant, In Ob. Pr. 43. 
erefcentefque, In Quint, Nov* 

107. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



ereta, In Ob. Pr. EL 33. 
Creui'a, Ad J. Ro. 60. 
crimen, EL iv. 57, v. 53. 
crimina, EL iv. 62. 
criminis, EL i. 43. 
crines, EL iv. 14. Ad Patr, 

45. Man/. 33. 
crinibus, EL i. 38. 
criftata, Nat. &c. 40. 
crocos, Epit. Da. 151. 
crocum, £/. v. 108. Man/. 40. 
crocus, £/. iii. 20. 
cruci, In Quint. Nov. 104. 
erudelia,. EL iv. 65. In Quint. 

Nov. 30. 
crudelibus, In Quint* Nov. 

221. 
cruentatum, EL l. 37. 
cruor, EL iv. 76. 
cruore. EL iv, 110. In 0b. 

Pr. 11. 
cryftaUinam, Ira 0&. Pr. El. 

63. 
cubili, EL iii. 35. 
cubito, In Salm. 10. 
cucullos, In Salm. 6. 
cucullus, Ep. P. B. ii, 7. In 

Quint. Nov. 82. 
cui, EL vi. 90. P" 06. Pr. SO. 

Ira QwVtf. .flfoB. 27, 98. De 

Jo 7 . P/. 98. Ad Salf. 7, 99- 

Ad J. Re. 56. 
cuilibet, In Quint. Nov. 192. 
cuique, EL v. 111. 
cujus, Ad Leon. ii. In Quint. 

Nov. 112. Ad J. Ro. 50. 
culmen, In Quint. Nov. 180. 
culmiaa, EL vii. 13. IVaf. &c. 

68. 
culmus, Epit. Da. 9. 
culta, Epit. Da. 63. 
cultior, EL v. 107- 
cultoribus, De Id PL 31. 
cultu, Ad J. Ro. 1. 
cultus, Ad Salf. 22. 
cum, El. iii. 41, 66, iv. 41, 

117, v. 34,39, 6*0 83, 119, 



vi. 52, 84. Ep. P. B. i. 14, 

In Quint. Nov. 7, 55, 77, 

137- Man/. 47. 
cum, £/. iii. 27, 37, 40, v. 42, 

79,93. In 0b. Pr. 38. In 0b. 

Pr. EL 7, 39. Ad Patr. 30, 

42, 79- Ad Salf. 4. Epit. Da. 

47, 52, 129, 142. Ad J. Ro. 

15. 
cun&a, Ad Leon. i. 9. Epit. Da* 

49.^ 
cun&aque, Ad Leon. i. 9. 
cunctarum, Nat. &c. 66. 
cuncti, Epit. Da. 210. 
cupiam, Ad Patr. 1. 
cupiat, £/. v. 1 12. 
cupide, In Quint. Nov. 165. 
cupidine, In Quint. Nov. l63. 
cupidineas, EL vii. 3. 
Cupido, EL v. ^)9, vii. 65. 
cupidus, El. v. 127. 
cupis, Man/'. 18. 
cupit, El. v. 56, 57, 129. Ep. 

P. B. iv. 4. Ire Qwi/tf. JVot>. 

17. 
cur, EL v. 81, vii. 99. 
cura, £/. i. 11, vi. 49. Epit, 

Da. 15. 
curse, Ad Patr. 105. Afa;?/, 

88. Ad J. Ro. 51. 
curaret, Manf. 90. 
curas, ispif. Da. 46. 
curis, EL i. 18, iv. 105. 
curre, EL iv. 1. 
currit, EL v. 97. Nat. &c. 44. 
curru, £;,. P. £. i. 6. iVfltf. &c„ 

2. 
currum, £/. iii. 33. 
currus, EL iv. 120, vi. 25. Ad 

Pair. 99. In Ob. Pr. El. 50. 
curf'u, EL v. 81. In Quint. 

Nov. 209. 
curfuque, EL iv. 39. 
curvare, EL vii. 3.5. 
curvaniine, In Quint. Nov, 

166. 
curvi, Ad Salf. 41. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



eufpide, In Quint. Nov. 39- 
cufpis, El. iv. 110, vii. 102. In 

Quint. Nov. 39. 
cuftoditaque, Ad Pair. 71. 
cuftos, EL iv. 112. Ad J. Ro. 

54. 
Cybele, El. v. 126. 
Cydoniufque, El. vii. 37. 
cygnos, Manf. 30. 
Cyllenius, EL iii. 13 # 
Cynthia, El. v. 46. 
Cynthius, Manf. 55. 
cypariffa, EL v. 121. 
Cypri, Nat. &c. 63. 
Cyprida, El. iii. 20. 
Cypridos, is/, vii. 48. 
Cyprius, EL vii. 11. 
Cypron, EL i. 84. 
Cytherea, EL v. 112. 



D. 

da, El. iv. 61. 

dabis, Ep. P. B. iii. 6. 

dabit, Nat. &c. 28. ^ /. ilo. 

78. 
Damafcus, £/. iv. 11 6. 
damna, El. vii. 30. Apol. 8. 
damnarit, E/>. P. B. iv. 2. 
damnas, ^4d Pair. 72. 
damnofum, -<4d <Sa//'. 20. 
damnum, Epit. Da. 111. 
Damon, Epit. Da. 20, 36, 127, 

143, 198, 203, 211. 
Damona, Epit. Da. 7, 11. 
dantem, In Quint. Nov. 52. 
Daphnin, Epit. Da. 1, 31. 
dapibufque, EL vi. 13. 
dapis, El. vi. 71. 
Dardanias, E^zY. Da. 162. 
data, Ad J. Ro. 51. 
date, irc 06. Pr. 2. 
Datis, Epit. Da. 137. 
datum, In Ob. Pr. 30. Nat*. 

&c. 64. 
datur, Ad Patr. 112. 

vol. I. 



Dardaniis, £/. i. 73. 

dare, £/. i." 25. Ep. P. B. ii. 

3. I« Qwm*. A T ou. 112, 120. 
Daunio, Ad J. Ro. 10. 
de, In Ob. Pr. 45. Manf. 91. 

£^V. Da. 97. 
dea, £/. i. 10, iii. 43, v. 53, 

vii. 96. 
dea3, De/a\ P/. 1. 
deam, In Ob. Pr. EL 17, 56. 
dearum, EL vii. 53. 
debet, £/. i. 8. 
debetur, EL i. 71 • 
debilis, ^0/. 5. 
debita, Maw/. 13. 
decantatiimque, Ad Patr. 119* 
decebant, /4c? Patr. 80, 
Decembrem. £/. vi. 9. 
decemplicis, De Jd. P/. 17. 
decennali, EL i. 31. 
decentes, Ad Salf. 4. 
decentior, EL v. 107- 
decet, £/. iv. 89. Ad Patr. 52. 
decidat, Nat. &c. 22. 
deciduos, Manf j6. 
declivia. Nat. &c. 41. 
decolor, EL iv. 106. 
decorem, Nat. &c. 62. 
decuiffe, El. vii, 25. 
decus, EL i. 59. In Salm. 7. 

In Ob. Pr. EL 12. De Id. 

PL 35. Maw/. 50. Ad J. 

Ro. 72. 
dederat, In Quint. Nov. 27. 
deder it, Epit. Da. 109. 
dedimus, £/. vi. 87. 
dediffe, EL iv. 16. Ad Leon. 

iii. 4. Nat. &c. 18. 
dedit, £/. v. 23. ^0/. 2. De 

Id PL 25. ^ P^/\ 14, 97. 

Epit. Da. 183. 
dedocuitque, Ad El. v'i. 6*. 
defendere, El. vii. 45. 
defixa, El. iv. 49* 
defluxit, £/. iii. 55. 
degener, y4rf /. Ro. 28. 
degeneri, ^c/ Pa£r, 83. 

* b 



VERBAL INDEX. 



degit, Ad Salf. 84. 

Dei, El. iv. 44, 111, vi. 83. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 35. De Id. 

PL 10. 
dein, In Quint. Nov. 6l. 
Deiope, Ad Salf. 4. 
deje&a, Nat. &c. 31. 
Delia, Nat. &c. 49. 
deliciafque, El. vi. 11. 
delicuere, El. iv. 66. 
delituifle, El. i. 6. 
Delius, El. v. 13, 14. 
Delo, M<m/. 48. ^2rf J. Ro. 

65. 
Delphica, Ad J. Ro. 60. 
delphinafque, El. v. lib', 
deme, El. vii. 99. 
demiffoque, ^ Pa/r. 39* 
dena, Ep. P. B. iii. 4. 
denique, Nat. &c. 65. Ad 

Pair. 50, 86. £/>#. Da. l6. 
denfas. £/. iv. 11 7. 
denfi, Epit. Da. 97. 
denfus, El. iii. 51. 
dent, El. 4. 8. 
dentis, In Quint. Nov. 39« 
Deo, El. v. 66. In Quint. Nov. 

26, 223. 
deorum, El. vi. 40, 57 * Nat. 

&c. 4. Man/. 42. £p/f. Da. 

197. 
deos, El. iv. 6, 68, v. 118, vi. 

36, 66, 86. Ep. P. B. ii. 

8. Ad Leon. iii. 8. Ad Patr, 

48. 
deplorans, Jn Quint. Nov. 135. 
deque, EL iv. 118. 
derifit, Ep. P. B. iii. 1. 
defcribis, Man/. 21. 
defers, is/, v. 49. 
deferta, In Quint. Nov. 21. 
deferto, Epit. Da. <)«/. 
defipuifiet, ^/d Icon. ii. 8. 
defit, Im Quint. Nov. 83. 
defpice, ^ Patr. 17. 
deipicit, I« Qwfof. Nov. 167. 
deiUnatam, F/J 06. Pr. 9. 



defuper, £^zV. D#. 49. 
deteftabile, In Quint. Nov. 213, 
detinet, Ad Leon. iii. 8. 
detinuifie, EL v. 76. 
detonat, El. i. 32. 
detur, EL iiL 18, vii. 87. 
deturbata, Nat. &c. 24. 
Deum, El. v. 18, vi. 10, vii. 

18, 64. Ad Leon. i. 4. De 

Id PL 6. 
Deus, El. iv. 92, v. 122, vii. 

93. Ad Leon. i. 5, 9. 7« 

Q?///tf. JVov. 199. Nat. &e. 

43. ^</ /. Ro. 25. 
Deva?, £/. i. 3. 
devenit, El. iv. 11. 
devexo, Nat. &c. 43. 
devia, EL iv. 98. 
devius, Ad J. Ro. 9. 
devoto, EL vi. 69. 
devovens, iw; 0b. Pr. EL 1 7. 
devoverat, Ep. P. B. iv. 1. 
dexter, Epit. Da. 208. 
dextera, In Ob. Pr. 9. 
dextra, In Quint. Nov. 51, 

207. 
dextrain, Epit. Da. 121. 
dextri, Ad I. Ro. 69. 
diademaque, In Qubit. Nov. 

94. 
diarnque, Ad I. Ro. 63, 
Dianam, El. v. 101. 
dicam, Man/'. 82, 88. Epit. 

Da. 163. 
dicere, EL iv. 47, 48. Epit, 

Da. 31. 
dici, ;!/«/// : 10. 
dicite, Z>c /</ P/. i. Epit. 

Da. 3. 
dicetur, Man/. 54. 
dicitur, £/. iv. 15, vi. 76. 
didu, Zn Qvf/tf. JVor. 214. 
didueit, £/. iv. 6*3. 
diebus, Ad Salf. 10. 
diei, Ad Patr. 99. 
diem, EL vii. 14. J» 06. Pr. 

£/, 39. fyif. Da. 43. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



4tes, EL vii. 55. In Quint. Nov. 

226.Epit.Da. 11,51, 110. 
difflentur, In Quint. Nov. l6l. 
digitumque, El. vi. 47. 
digna, £/. iv. 95, 96, vii. 8. In 

Qui?it. Nov. 196. 
dignatus, Manf. 3. 
digniffime, El. lii. 13. 
dignum, El. vii. 20. 
dignumque, Epit. Da. 24. 
dignus, El. i. f, 89. 
dii, El. v. 40, 131, 134. 
diis, EL vi. 77. De Zd\ P/. 23. 

iWaw/: 70, 73. 
dilapfa, Nat. ike. 19. 
dileefca, I# Qwz'wf. Jtfiro. 26. 
dilecte, Manf. 7. 
dimidio, 2s7. iv. 20. 
diminui, El. iv. 62. 
dimotaque, Ad Patr. 90. 
dinumerans, J/i Quint. Nov. 

10. 
Diomedeam, ^4d El. vii. 10. 
dira, 2s7. iii. 6, iv. 100. I« 

Qamf. Nov. 12. In Ob. Pr. 

El. 23. 
Dircseo, Ad Leon. ii. 7* 
D'ircaeus, De Id. PI. 26. 
diriora, In Ob. Pr. El. 19. 
diris, £p. P. B. iv. 1. 
difcite, /» Ob. Pr. 1. 
Difcordia, Irc Quint. Nov. 142. 
difcors, £pzY. Da. 107. 
disjeftam, 2w Quint. Nov. 102. 
difpertire, ^4rf Patr. 64. 
difpertit, iVaf. &c. 48. 
difplicui, Epit. Da. 134. 
difponere, In Quint. Nov. 115. 
diffiluere, PpY. Da. 158. 
diffipare, 2>* -Sg/w. H. 7. 
diffultabit, lYaf. &c. 30. 
diftat, In Quint. Nov. 170. 
diilento, El. vi. 2. 
ditem, i\ T a£. &c. 31- 
ditefcere, Ad Patr. 73. 
ditior, £/. iii. 46. Nat. Sec. 

63. 



dius, El. iv. 14. 

diu, El. iv. 69, v. 133. In 

Quint. Nov. 44. 
diurno, El. v. 81. JVa^. &c. 37, 
diva, El. iii. 16, iv. 80, v. 66, 

In Quint. Nov. 198. 
divafque, In Quint. Nov. 129. 
diverberat, Nat. &c. 56. 
diverficoloribus, Epit. Da. 1 88* 
divefque, In Quint. Nov. 5. 
dividit, Epit. Da. 23. 
divina, Epit. Da. 187* 
divinum, El. iii. 56. Ad Patr* 

17. 
divitis, In 0b. Pr. El. 9. 
divos, In Quint. Nov. 129. 
divofque, Ad Patr. 22. Epit* 

Da. 205. 
divulfis, Nat. &c. 29. 
divdm, AdSalf. 23. Manf. 11, 

divumque, El. vi. 77. 

dixi, El. vii. 5. £pi7. Da. 142. 

dixifie, %£f. Da. 123. 

dixit, El. iii. 65, vii. 47* In 

Quint. Nov. 41, 131. £/>*7. 

Da. 77. 
docebit, jEpzY. Da. 4>5. 
docebunt, El. vii. 43. 
docet, El. iv. 40. Ad Leon* 

i.7. 
doda, £/h7. Da. 89. 
do&ae, ^rf Pafr. 181. 
dodaeque, Ad Salf. l6. 
doctiffime, El. iv. 23. 
dodo, Ad J. Ro. 16. 
doctus, El. iv. 18. 
docuit, J/i Sabn. H. 2. 
doiendo, 2s7. i. 39. 
dolet, 2s/. vii. 81. 
dolique, 2~7/ 0/3. Pr. 7. 
dolo, ^rf J. Po. 14. 
dolorem, Epit. Da. 17* 
dolos, El. vii. 66". I/j Quint, 

Nov. 213. 
dolofi, lira Sabn. H. 5. 
doluit, In Qi/i/tf. iVau. 33. 
* b 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



dolum, In Ob. Pr.dE/. 21. 

dolus, El v. 39. In Quint. 

Nov. 145. Epit. Da. 10*8. 
dominaberis, In Quint. Nov. 

128. 
domini, Ad Pair. 117- 
domino, Apol. 2, 1 . Epit. Da. 
18, 26, 35,44, 50, 57, 62, 
69,74, SI, 87,93, 112,124, 
139, 101, 179. 
dominus, In Quint. Nov. 7$, 

167. 
domitor, In Quint. Nov. 74. 
domum, El. v. 134. 
domos, El. iv. 82, vi. 75. 
domuit, In Quint. Nov. 89. 
domum, Epit. Da. 14, 18, 26, 
35, 44, 50, 57, 62, 68, 74, 
81, 87, 93, 112, 139, l6l, 
179- Manf 56. 
domus, El. i. 45, iii. 50. Ep. 

P. B. iii. 2. 
dona, El. v. 24, vi. 87- Ad 

Pair. 65, 112. Manf. 21. 
donaque, Ad J. Iio. 59. 
donafie, Ep. P. B. ii. 1. 
donaffet, Ad Patr. 96. 
donee, Nat. &c. 67. 
donis, El. vii. 97. JE>. P. #• 
ii. 4. ///. Qui?it. Nov. 32. 
Ad Patr. 8, 10. 
Dorida, JE/. iv. 7. 
dormis, In Quint. Nov. 92. 
dorfo, Nat. Sec. 59. 
dote, El. v. 71. 
dracones, J« Ob. Pr. EL 58. 
Dfuides, Manf. 42. 
Druidum, Manf. 41. 
Dryades, £/. v. 123. 
Dryopcquc, Epit. Da. 88. 
dubiam, /in Quint. Nov, 54. 
dubitant, £/. v. 131. 
dubitavit, In Quint. Nov, 28. 
dubites, El. iv. 125. 
dubito, Epit. Da. 159. 
dubius, EL vii. 78. 
ducat, £/. iv, 94. Maw/. 91, 



ducere, £/. iv. 15, 70. 
duces, EL iii. 12, iv. 74, vi. 

56. £ptf. Da. 164. 
duci, EL vii. 6. 
ducis, EL i. l6\ iii. 9- 
ducit, In 06. Pr. EL 41. 
dudum, EL i. 12. • 
dulce, Eh v. 4, vi. 28, vii. 19. 

^rf Salf 23. 
duleedme, /fy?o£. 3. 
dulei, EL iv. 41. J</ Salf. 32. 

£>/V. Da. 118. 
dulcia, EL vi. 35. ^/o 7 Pair. 

33. 
dulcibus, £/7z7. Da. 47. 
dulciloquum, Manf 8. 
dulces, EL iv. 38. 
dulcis, £>Y. Da. 13, 199- 
"Dulichium, £7. vi. 72. 
dum, EL i. 36, 85, iii. 5, 31, 
51, iv. 99, US, 119, !20, 
v. 26, 128, vi. 25, 43. Ad. 
Chr.5. In Ob. Pr. EL 5,57. 
In, Quint. Nov. 66, 94. Ad. 
Patr. 38. Epit. Da. 7, 32, 
51, 116, 141. Ad. J. Ho, 7- 
dumque, EL iii. 57. In Quint. 

Nov. 97. 
duobus, Ad Pair. 64. 
duos, EL vii. 102. 
dupiici, El. vii. 12. 
dura, Ad Chr. 3. 
duri, El. i. \5. 
duris, /<>Y. Do. 39- 
dnro, El. iii. 64, vii. 89. Ad 

Patr. 23. 
duros, Manf 64. 
durum. jEpitf* Da. 106. 



E. 

i 

eadem, JVa/. &c. 44. £pfr. Da. 
99. 

ebulliebat In Ob. Pr. EL 16. 
cbur, EL vi. 43. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



ecce, El. iii. 53, v. 6l. In Ob. 

Pr. EL 23. 
Echidnas, In Ob. Pr. 26. 
Echionio, In Quint. Nov. 65. 
ecquid, Epit. Da. 115. 
editus, Ad J. Ro. 25. 
edomitis, El. vi. 70. 
cdomui, EL vii. 32. 
effari, In Ob. Pr. EL 65. 
effera, In Quint. Nov. 142. 
efflat, In Quint. Nov. 37. 
effoetas, Nat. &c. 42. 
effcetique, In Quint. Nov. 218. 
effoeto, EL v. 50. 
effudi, In Ob. Pr. EL 4. 
effudit, Epit. Da. 4. 
effugit, El. iv. 100. 
effundit, In Quint. Nov. 192. 
effulis, EL i. 3S. 
effuibs, EL v. 65. 
egelida, EL v. 87. 
egena, EL v. 72. 
egenus, EL iv. 86. 
egreditur, EL v. 109- 
egregiam, ^4d /. Ro. 68. 
ejus, £/. iv. 37. 
elata, ^4d. P«f/\ 81. 
Eleg'eia, EL ii. 23. 
Elegia, EL xl 49. 
elegis, £/. vi. 51. 
elementa, Nat. &c. 51. 
Eleo, EL vi. 26". 
Eleufina, E/. iv, 12. 
eliibs, EL vi. 86. 
eludeie, Manf. 19. 
elufus, J?z 06. Pr. EL 31. 
Elyfio, I/* 06. Pr. 48. 
eminetj I« Quint. Nov. 182. 
emirabitur, ^d 5a//: 33. 
emotasque, Ma;?/". 68. 
en, EL iii. 3. E/wt. -Da. 214. 
Endymioneae, EL i. 78. 
enfe, In Ob. Pr. 16. 
enfis, Ira 06. Pr. £/. 54. 
enutrita. Man/. 28. 
Enyo, EL iv. 75. 
€|0, £/. v. 16. 



Eoas, In Quint. Nov. 133. 
Eoo, EL iii. 34. 
ephemeridas, De Id. PL 6. 
epulse, EL vi. 20. 
epuJas, EL v. 9, vi. 9' dd 

Patr. 41. 
eques, EL vii. 36. In Salm. 3. 
equis, EL vii. 84. 
equitis, In Salm. 9. 
equo, EL v. 92. 
equorum, £/. iv. 121. 
equos, EL iv. J8. v. 44, 54. 
eram, EL iii. 1. 37, vii. 74. 

£/?*Y. Da. 1 29. 
erant, E/w£. Da. 137. 
eras, EL ii. 11. 

erat, £/. iv. 24, v. 65, vi. 20, 
vii. 13, 38, viik 50, 62. In 
Quint. Nov. 50, 62. Nat. 
&c. 32. £/>ir. Pa. 115. 
Eratoque, £/. vi. 51. 
Erebi, In Quint. Nov. 69. 
Erebove, In Ob. Pr. EL 33. 
Erectheides, Ad J. Ro. 57. 
erect um, Epit. Da. 195. 
eremo, In Quint. Nov. 86. 
ergo, Nat. &c. 19. Ad Patr. 
101. Ad Salf. 9. Man/. 24, 
49. Ad J. Ro. 6 ! . 
ergone, Nat. &c. 8. 
erigit, De Id. PL 23. 
Erinnye, In Ob. Pr. El. 33, 
eripuifle, In Ob Pr 40. 
eris, EL iv. ill, vi. 90, vii. 

28, 98. Epit. Da. 209. 
erit, Ep. I. B. 3. Man/. 88. 

Epit. Da. 27. 
errant, £/. iii. 25. 
errantes, Ad Leon. ii. 9« 
erraticorum, Ira 06. Pr. El. 

59- 
erraverat, In Quint. Nov. 9* 
erraveris, Ad. J. do. 39. 
error, Ad EL viii. 3. EjhY. 

Da. 113. 
erroribus, Nat. &c. 1. 
efuriet, Nat. &c. 15. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



etemm, EL iv. 107, v. 97. vi. 

77. 
Euan, EL vi. 23. 
Eumenidum, In Qxdnt. Nov. 8. 
eunt, £/. i. 48, v. 138. 
eunti, EL iv. 3. 
Euoe, EL vi. 17. 
Eur us, EpzY. Da. 60. 
Europe, In Quint. Nov. \7\. 
Eurum, El. iv. 39- 
Euribates, El. ii. 15. 
Eurypyli, In Ob. Pr. 24. 
Evandri, Ad Salf. 28. 
evehere, Ep. V. B. iv. 4. 
evehitur, £/. iii. 24. I». Quint. 

Nov. 57. 
cverfo, £/• vi. 25. 
evocat, In Quint. Nov. 156. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 38. 
evolat, EL vii. 4S. 
exanguifque, In Quint. Not» 

148. 
excepto, Ad. Patr. $6. 
excipit, El. i. 27. 
excitant, In Ob. Pr. EL 38, 

39- 

excitat, In Quint. Nov. 177. 
excors, EL vii. 77. 
excubias, EL v. 38. 
excultam, Ad Patr. 73. 
execrantia, In Quint. Nov.j)l. 
execratus, In Ob. Pr. EL 21. 
exemiffe, Nat. &c. 18. 
fcxemit, Epit. Da. 8. 
exemplar, De Id. PL 10. 
exemplo, EL vii. S7, 92. 
exemplum, EL v. 95- Manf. 

120. 
exequor, ^/cZ C/</\ 6. 
exercet, Ad Salf. 13. 
exercita, Epit. Da. 106. 
exercuit, £/>zY. Da. 5. 
exhibuere, EL iv. 85. 
exiguum, In Quint. Nov. 183. 

Ad Patr. 7. 
cxiguus, IT/, vi. 71. 
exilii, EL i. 20. Manf. 64. 



exilia, Jw Quint. Nov. 206, 
exilium, £/. i. 17. 
eximium, EL i. 59. 
exit, EL iii. 32. 
exonerare, Epit. Da. 17. 
exofa, In Quint. Nov. 158» 
expatiantur, EL v. 124. 
expecto, £jw£. Da. 60. 
expedivit, In Salm. H. 1. 
expertis, EL vii. 29. 
exponere, EL iv, 89- 
expugnatae, In Quint. Nov. 30 ? 
extat, In Ob. Pr. EL 14. 
extende, Ad. Patr. 107. 
extenfceque, EL iv. 107, 
extera, EL i. 72. 
ex tern am, £/. iv. 90. 
extinda, Nat. &c. 27. 
extinctis, Add. EL vii. 7. 
extis, ^4d Pflff. 29. 
extrema, In Quint. Nov. 1. 
extremis, EL iii. 49. Im Quint, 

Nov. 11 6, 184. £/»Y. Da, 

178. 
extremum, £/)#. D<7. 121. 
exuit, EL v. 55. 
exul, EL i. 22. I/z Quint, 

Nov. 8. 
exulantis, I» Salm. II. 4. 
exulat, £/. v. 34. 
exules, De Id. PL 37. 
exululat, 7/i Quint. Nov. 64. 
exululant, !« Quint. Nov. 150, 



F. 



fabulator, De Id P/. 38. 

face, £/. iii. 6. 

facem, E/>. I. B. 2. 

faces, £/. i. 56, v. 98. Epit, 

Da. 19:. 
facefiere, In Qui?it. Nov. 124, 
faceffet, Ad. J. P^o. 80. 
iaciam, El. vii. 30, 89. 
facieque, EL vii. 53. 
fades, 17. vii, 19, JVaf, &c. 9, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



faciles, EL v. 6~. 

facili, Epit. Da. 145. 

facilis, El. vii. 101. 

facilifque, Ad Leon. i. J. 

facis, El. vii. 68. 

faciunt, P/. iv. 22. 

facia, P/. vii. 94. J« Qwwf. 

JVor. 214. Nat. &c. 4. 
fa&ique, I« Quint. Nov. 123. 
fa&is, ^d Pair. 112. 
facundia, ^rf Pa^r. JQ, 
facundus, Man/. 23. 
fagineo, El. vi. 6l. 
fagos, JSpif. Da. 136. 
falce, PZ. iii. 8. 
fallax, PZ. i. 60. In Quint. 

Nov. 91. 
fallere, I» 06. Pr. 21. PjhY. 

Da. 46. 
fallit, P/. i. 34. Ejwf. Da. 198. 
fallor, El. v. 5, vii. 56. Epit. 

Ep. P. P. i. 3. 
fall a, J/i Quint. Nov. 79. 
f alius, il/flw/". 6l. 
Fama, El. iv. f 1. J« 06. Pr. 

El. 7. In Quint- Nov. 195. 
fama, In Quint. Nov. 86, 201, 

Ad Salf. 15. Man/. 51. 
Famae, Pz Quint. Nov. 172. 
fame, PZ. iv. 96' 
fames, JYY/£. &e. 13. 
famulas, Man/, 55. 
famulos, El. v. 118. 
fana, El. v. 18, vi. S6. Ad 

Leon. iii. 2. 
fando. J&piY. Da. 43. 
fana, P/j/Z. D«. 102, 
fas, In Quint. Nov. 115. Epit. 

Da. 201. 
fa fees, El. i. 67. 
fafcinat, Ejn£. Da. 78. 
fafia, iYaZ. &c. 1 1 . 
faflb, El. iv. 61. 
faftis, In Quint. Nov, 130. 
faftos, De Id PL 6. 
faftu, Epit. Da. 89. 
faftus, In Quint. Nov. 99. 



fata, EL v. 99- ^ Pfl/r. 28. 

M«///: 98. Epit. Da. 2, 104. 
fatali, Epit. Da. 166. 
fatetur, P/. iv. 59, v. 53, vii. 

33. 
fati, Nat, &c. 7. In 0b. 

Pr. 1. 
fatidicamque, Man/. 4>7. 
fatis, Epit. Da. 106. 
fatifcit, Nat. &c. 1. PwY. Da. 

64. 
fatorum, JVtfZ. &c. 35. 
fatum, Ira 06. Pr. 17. 
fatur, I« Quint. Nov. 156. 
fauces, In Quint. Nov. 146* 
faucibus, In 0b. Pr. 40. 
Fauni, Ad Salf. 27. 
Faunus, Epit. Da. 32. 
faufta, EL i. 86 ^ Salf. IJ. 
fauftaque, El. vi. 82. 
fauftus, In 0b. Pr. El. 47. 
Fauxe, Ep. P. P. i. 2. 
fave, P^zY. Da. 208. 
favebit, ^fZ Sa# 37 '. 
fa vent, P/. vi. 34. 
favente, P/. iv. 31. ^</P. Po. 

87. 
favet, El. ii. 4. 
favifie, Manf. 73. 
Favoni, EL iii. 47. 
fecit, EL iii. 4. 
fefellit, Mara/ 15. 
felices, In Ob. Pr. 47, 
felicius, Ad Leon. ii. 3. 
felix, EL i. 75, iii. 63. In 

Quint, Nov. 5. Ad J. Ro. 

43. 
felle, EL vii. 26. 
feneftrae, In Quint. Nov. 175, 
fera, El. iii. 16. 
feraces, Ad Salf. iii. 14. 
feralia, Nat. &c. 27. 
feralibus, In Quint. Nov. 153. 
ferarum, In Quint. Nov. 87. 
ferat, El. v. 139- 
ferax, ApoL 5. 
ferere, .NaZ. &c. 26. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



feret, In Quint, "Nov, 44. 

feretra, El. i. 22. 

feris, El. vi. 70. Ep. P. B. 

i. 7. 
ferit, El vii, 72. JSpiV. Da. 

193. 
fero, El vi. 69. 
ferocem, In Quint. Nov. 71. 
feror, Jw 0/?. Pr. JEf. 48. 
ferox, Ad Fair. 49. 
ferre, El v. 70. JSpif. Da. 

159. 
ferrea, P/. iv. 90. 
ferri, El iv. 125. 
ferreis, In Quint. Nov. 11. 
ferro, El v. 100. 7» Quint, 

Nov. 144. 
ferte, ^o 1 Salf. 30. 
fertilis, /7j Quint. Nov. 171. 
fertur, p/. iv. J 6. 
ferunt, P/. iv. 93, v. 10, vi. 

67- In Quint. Nov. 170. 

Nat. &c. 59. 
ferus, p/. i. 43, iv. 63, vii. 12, 

49. In 0b. Pr. 10. In Quint. 

Nov. 7. 
fervent, El v. 11. 
fervida, I/i 06. Pr. El. 16. 
{etto, Ad Salf. 18. 
feffum, P/. i. 27. 
feffus, v. 36, 79* 
fefta, P/. v. 118, vi. 44. 
fefta, In Qui?it. Nov. 31. Ad 

Pair. 44. Epit. Da. 219. 
feftaque, El vi. 10. 
feftiuantis, P/. iv, 4. 
fefto, Men/*. 44. 
fiat, El iv. 54. 
iibris, Ad Pair. 28. 
fida, P/. iv. 52. 
fidrcque, ^o\ Pf//r. 114. 
fide, Ad J. Ro. 38. 
fidei, In Quint. Nov. 93, l63. 
fidele, P/. i. 6. 
fideles, In Quint. Nov. 10, 

155. 
fidelis, Ad J. Ro. 54. 



fidem, El vii. 30. Nat. &c. 

51. Ppzf. Da. 33. 
fides, Maw/. 94. 
fidi, El. i. 91- 
fidos, In Quint. Nov. 122. 
fidus, Epit. Da. 37. 
fieri, P/. v. 48. 
fiet, Epit. Da. 37. 
figat, El vii. 102. 
figens, In Quint. Nov. 85. 
figit, Epit. Da. 80. 
fila, Ad Leon. ii. 6. /« Ob. Pr. 

37. 
filia, J« 0b. Pr. El 32. P/wV. 

Da. 88. 
fili*, I» 06. Pr. El 40. 
findor, P/. vii. 79- 
finibus, P/. iv. 104. Ad J. Ro. 

32. 
finierat, In Quint. Nov. 165. 
finitimus, EL iv. 72. 
fingitur, El iii. 50. 
finxi, P/)i£. Da. 146. 
finxit, De Irf. PI. 8. 
fifcellae, £/>#. Da. 135. 
fiftula, Epit. Da. 156, 169. 
fixa, In Quint. Nov. 104. Ad 

Salf. 20. ilfaw/. 65. 
flabra, ^o* 5a//. 13. 
flagello, P/.iv. 101. J« Qwwtf. 

Nov. 70. 
flagrabit, JVfl*. &c. 69. 
flamina, El v. 6*8. 
flamine, In 0b. Pr. El 26. 
flammifque, In Quint. Nov.U 0. 
flamma, Nat. &c. 67. 
flammae, In Quint. Nov. 24. 

Ad Patr. 20. 
flaramantia, Epit. Da. 194. 
flammaque, El vii. 74. 
flammas, El. i. 51. Ep. P. P. 

iii. 8. 
fiammeus. El iv. 33. 
flammis, Add El vii. 8. 
flammivolifqne, Ep. P. B. 1. 6. 
flava, El. v. 53. P/;<Y. Da. 175 , 
lavas, Ppif. Da. 10. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fiaventes, Man/. 39- 
flavere, El. iv. 13. 
flavet, EL iii. 46. 
flavicoma, Man/. 47. 
flavicomamque, El. vi. 28. 
flebam, EL iii. 67. 
flebilis, EL i. 22. Ira 06. Pr. 6. 
flebimus, Epit. Da. 202. 
flede, £/. iv. 14. 
fle&ens, In Quint. Nov. 166. 
fledit, EL v. 32. 
flendus, EL i. 42. 
flere, £/. vi. 80. 
iletu, EL iii. 15. 
ilevit, EL iii. 12. 
flexanimo, Ad Leon. ii. 12. 
flore, EL v. 63. Maw/. 74. 
iiorea, JEX iii. 58, 120. 
florentia, In Quint. Nov. 15. 
floribus, EL iii. 43, v. 64, 65. 
floridus, JVaf. &c. 41. 
floris, £/. i. 62. 
fluenti, Epit. Da. 90. 
Huentifonis, In Quint. Nov* 

25. 
fluis, El. i. 58. 
flumina, EL iii. 45. 
flumina, E;>zY. Da. 70. 
fluminaque, jEpzV. Da. 6. 
flumine, £/. i. 83. Man/. 30. 
fluvio, £/. iii. 21. 
fluvios, Ad Patr. 53. 
fluviofque, Epit. Da. 120. 
focis, In Quint. Nov. 224. 
foco, El. v. 102. 
focos, El. vi. 12, vii. 82. 
foecundum, EL vi. 31. 
fascundus, EL i. 31. 
feedere, Ma/?/. 82. 
frediflima, Ad Patr. 108. 
fcedum, In Ob. Pr. El. 46. 
foedus, Ep. P. B. ii. 7. In 

Quint. Nov. 3. 
fcemina, EL i. 72. 
foemineis, El. i. 74. 
foeta, Epit. Da. 39. 
foetus, EL iv. 89. ApoU 12. 



foliis, £/. v. 25. 
foliumque, Epit. Da. 151. 
fonte, El. vi. 62. 
fontes, Ad Patr. 1. 23pz'£. Da. 

71. ^c?. J. #0. 20. 
fores, In Quint. Nov. 175. In 

In Ob. Pr. EL 62. 
foret, EL i. 21. Ad Leon. ii. 4. 

Epit. Da. 116. 
foris, £/>#. Da. 49. 
formae, El. i. 53. 
formseque, Epit. Da. 197- 
formam, £/. v. 103. 
formaque, El. $7* 
formidabilis, EL vii. 95. 
formofas, El. vii. 23. 
formofi, EL i. 76. 
formofms, El. v. 57- 
formofus, Nat. &c. 45. 
foro, El. i. 32. 
forfan, Ad J. Ro. 41. 
forfitan, El. iv. 43, vii. 89. Ad 

Patr. 119. Manf.91. Ad J 

Ro. 83. 
forte, EL iv. 41, v. 41, vi. 2, 

vii. 6l, 90. In Quint. Nov. 

9. De Id. PL 21. JSpiY. Da. 

75, 147, 157. 
fortes, El. vii. 10. 
fortius, Nat. &c. 33- 
fortunate, Man/ 49. 
forum, Ad Salm. 8. 
foffor, Epit. Da. 104. 
fovet, El. v. 98, vi. 30. Nat. 

&c. 42. 
fra&sque, ifyzl. Da. 6l. 
fraena, ^d Pa£r. 99. Ad Salf. 

40. 
fraenantem, EL iv. 5. 
frasnaffe, ^j?o/. 11. 
fraenis, In Ob. Pr. EL 58. 
fragor, In Quint. Nov. 39. 
fragore, Nat. Sec. 51. 
Francinus, Epit. Da. 137. 
Francifcus, In Quint. Nov. 86. 
frange, In Quint. Nov. 99. 
franget, In Quint. Nov. 110. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



iratemaque, Nat. &c. 32. 
fratifque, El. iii. 9. 
fratribus, Ad. J. Ro. 13. 
fratris, El. v. 48. 
fratrum, In Quint. Nov. 58. 

Ad J. Ro. 39. 
fraude, In Quint. Nov. 114. 

Epit. Da. 166. 
fraudumque, In Quint. Nov. 

17. 

fremitufque, In Quint. Nov. 

62. 
frenduit, Ep.P.B. iii. 3. 
frequens, El. v. 109, vii. 53, 

Man/. 52. Epit. Da. 176. 
freta, El. vi. 72. In Sahn. 2, 
frigida, In Salm. 2. 
frigora, El. v. 83. 
frigore, In Ob. Pr. El. 52. 
frigoribus, Epit. Da. 3$. 
frigus, Add. El. vii. 9- 
fronde, El. v. 121, Ad J. 

Ro. 2. 
frondentis, Epit. Da. 21 6. 
frondet, Ad Half. 29- 
frondofa, I» OA. Pr. 31. 
frondofaque, Manf. 6l. 
fronte, El. i. 65. 
frons, £/. v. 6l. JEpY. Da. 84. 
frontis, El. i. 59- Maw/. 76. 
f nidus, ^0/. 3. 
frui,E/.iv.l25. In Ob. Pr. EL 

68. 
fruor, El. i. 20. 
fruticetaque, £J. v. 125. 
fuco, Manf. 48. 
fudit, El. iv. 114. AdJ.Ro. 

74. 
fuerint, £/. ii. 5. 
fugaces, In Ob.Pr. El. 39. 
fugam, El. iv. 115. 
fugare, In Ob.Pr. IS. 
fugafle, £/. iii. 33. 
iugax, In Quint. Nov. 205. 
fugi, El vii. 57. 
fugiens, £/. v. 31. 
fugiffe, /id ?fl/r. 92. 



fugit, El. iv. 10, 81, S6, v. 

130. 
fugitivus, Manf. 57. 
fugiunt, El. v. 20. 
fuiflent, Ad Pair. 97. 
fuifti, In Ob. Pr. El. 13. 
iuit, El. iv. 55, 69, vii. 2, 20, 

64. Add. El. vii. 4. ^0/. 

9. £/>#. -Da. 41, 79, 213. 
fulgent, In Quint. Nov. 4t7. 
fulgente, El. ii. 1. 
fulgentia, In Quint. Nov. 109. 
fulgentibus, El. iv. 107. 
fulgens, Epit. Da. 188. 
fulgentia, EL v, 75. 
fulget, JV<tf . &c. 49. Ad Patr. 

70. Ad J. Ro. 44. 
fulgidi, In Ob. Pr. El. 55. 
fulgore, EL vii. 55. 
fulgurat, In Quint. Nov. 167. 
fulmen, Ep. J. B. 4. Ad Patr. 

49 
fulmenque, In Ob. Pr. 27. 
fulmina, El. vii. 41. Nat. &c, 

52. 
fulmine, In Quint. Nov. 200. 
fulmineum, Nat. &c. 40. 
fulminis, El. iv. 67. 
fulfit, El. iii. 54. 
fulvofque, Ad J. Ro. 59. 
fumabit, Nat. &c. 27- 
fumabunt, El. vii. 97' 
fumanti, In Quint. Nov. 24. 
fumantibus, Ad Patr. 28. 
fumidus, El. v. 92. 
funalia, In Quint. Nov. 59. 
funfta, Ad Patr. 54. 
fundamina, In Quint. Nov. 

140. ^d Patr. 47. 
fundat, £/. ii. 23. 
fundatis, Nat. &c. 33. 
fundis, EL vi. 32. 
fundit, EL v. 6'0. ^d Pa^r. 84. 
fundo, In Ob. Pr. EL 23. 
fune, In Quint. Nov. 84. 
funera, In, Quint, Nov. 11, 
135, 



VERBAL INDEX; 



funere, Epit. Da. 20. 

funereo, EL i. 44. 

funeftoe, El. iii. 3. 

funefto, Ep. P. B. iii. 9. 

furens, Ad Leon. ii. 2. 

furentis, EL ii. 15. 

furiali, In Quint. Nov. 29 • 

furiofa, EL i. 37. 

furit, Natf. &c. 53. Epit. Da. 

21S. 
furor, EL v. 12, 22. In Quint. 

Nov. 147. 
furore, EL vii. 73. 
furores, £/. vii. 99. In Ob. Pr. 

EL 27. 
furtiva, In Quint. Nov. 52. 
furvi, In Ob Pr. El. 43. 
fufa, EL v. 90. 
fuica, £pzY. £>«. 177. 
fulbs, Man/. 75. 
fufumque, EL vi. 33. 
fufus, ^4rf Leon. i. 9' 
futura, £/. vii. 101. Epit. Da. 

145. 
futuri, Ad. Pair. 24. ispsY. Da. 

92. 
futuros, Jra Qnint. Nov. 11. 

^Zd J. Ho. 24. 
futurum, Epit. Da. 82. 



Galli, Man/. 4. 

galii, iw Mor. 1. 

Gallia, ^d Pdtfr. 82. 

Gallica, El. vi. 12. 

Gallus, In Quint. Nov. 126. 

Gangetidis, EL iii. 49* 

garrula, EL 1, 28. irc Quint. 

Nov. 215. 
gaudebant, In Quint. Nov. 112. 
gaudebunt, E^zY. JDa. 32. 
gaudens, Ad J. llo. 1. 
gaudere, EL v. 47. 
gaudes, Ad Salf. 2. 
gaudet, Man/. 10, 



gaudete, Ira 5a/;«. 1. 

gaudia, EL i. 42, iii. 64, y. 

109, vi. 11, vii. 80. Epit. 

Da. 206. 
gazae, Ad J. Ro. 55. 
gelida, Man/. 28. 
gelidi, Epit. Da. 71, 12p. 
Gelonos, Nat. &c. 54. 
gelu, El. v. 4. ^</</. £/. vii. S. 
gemelle, ^d/. Ho. 1. 
gemelli, In Quint. Nov. 165. 
gemellus, De Id. PL 11. 
gemina, Ad J. llo. 2. 
geminis, EL i. 81. 
geminique, ^d Patr. 34. 
gemino, -E/. vii. 55. Nat. &c, 

48. ^fd Patfr. 3. £ptf. Pc 

184. 
gemraas, El. i. 55. iV T tf£. &c. 

65. 
gemmatis, EL iii. 59. 
genae, In Ob. Pr. EL 1. 
genas, EL i. 6l. 
generis, In Ob. Pr. EL 12. 
generofo, EL iv. 25, vi. 29. 
genetricis, In Ob. Pr. 28. 
genialibus, In Quint. Nov. 224. 
genitorque, Ad Patr. 66. 
genitus, Ad J. Ro. 60. 
gens, In Quint. Nov. 41, 95 7 

158. Epit. Da. 107. 
gente, Manf. 41. 
gentes, Ad Leon. i. 1. In 

Quint. Nov. 14. 
genti, In Quint. Nov. 98. 
gentis, In Ob. Pr. 30. Ad Patr. 

71. Ad J. Ro. 26,72. 
genuiffe, .4c? Patfr. 6l. 
genus, £/. vii. 9. De Irf P/. 8. 

Manf. 20, $5. jEptf. Da, 

106, 128. 
Gergeffie, £Z. iv. 103. 
germana, Ad Salf. 24. 
Germanas, EL iv. 13. 
germanifque, EL iv. 7Y« 
gefta, Ad Patr. 46. AJfo^ 43. 
geftans, Epit. Da. 21 6, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



geftant, In Quint. Nov. 59. 
geftaffe, El. vi. 15. 
geftat, In Quint. Nov. 207. 
geftetis, In Salm. 8. 
geftit, Ep. P. B. iv. 3. 
giganteum, El. v. 40. 
gigas, De Id. PL 22. 
gladio, Ad Patr. 3Q. 
glandes, Ad Patr. 48. 
glaucos, Man/. 33. 
glebas, Ad Salf. 14. 
globum, In Ob. Pr. El 55. 
gloria, EL iii. 14. Ad Leon. i. 

3. In Ob. Pr. 34. Epit. Da. 

182. 
gloriofus, De Id. PL 32. 
Glyceran, EL vi. 28. 
gnarus, In Ob. Pr. 23. 
gnato, EL i. 33. 
Gorgone, Nat. &c. 22. 
Gorlois, £p«V. Da. l67. 
gradiar, Ad Patr. 110. 
gradum, EL iv. 14. 
Graia?, Ma*/. 45. ^ /. -Ro. 

71. 

Graiis, ^rf P^r. 81. 
Graium, EL iv. 23. 
Graiufque, In Ob. Pr. EL 20. 
gramen, EL v. 73- 
gramma, In Ob. Pr. 22. £pif. 

Da. 71, 150, 154. 
gramine, El. iv. 36. 
grandaevofque, Jw Quint. Nov. 
3 118. 
grande, El. iv. 46, v. 21, vii. 

68. Epit. Da. 173. 
grandia, ^4d Patr. 81. 
grata, £7. i. 18, vii. 57. In 

Quint, Nov. 138. Epit. Da. 

213. 
grati, In Quint. Nov. 223. 
gratia, Ad Patr. 10. 
gratior, EL iv. 54. 
gratiflimos, I/* Sahu. 10. 
grato, J;;oZ. 10. Ad Patr. 113. 

£pft. Do. 47. 
graium, Ad Patr. 6. Ad Salf. 3. 



gratus, £/. iv. 12. 

grave, Epit. Da. 79- 

graves, In 0b. Pr. EL 23. Epit. 

Da. 1d9. 
gravidam, In Mor. 1. Epit. 

Da. 166. 
gravidos, EL iii. 7. 
graviora, £/. i. 121. 
gravis, EL vi. 25. 
gravius, £/. vii. 34. 
gregem, £/. ii. 2. 
grege, Epit. Da 97. 
greges, El. vi. 7 6. 
gregi, In Ob Pr. 30. 
gregis, El. iii. 8. 
gremio, EL iv. 42, v. 88, Qi, 
greffu, Ira Quint. Nov. 
greffum, Ad Sou. 1. 
gulae, Ad Patr. 43. 
gulamque, ^j?o/ 11. 
gurgite, Man/. 33. 
guttis, In Quint. Nov. 136. 
guttura, Ad Leon, u 6, 
gyro, El. v. 1. 
gyrofque, iVa/. &c. 18. 



H. 



habebat, JSpzV. Da. 142. 
habemus, ^rf Pa£r. 13. 
habet, El. i. 10, 49, 76 7 v. 55, 

114, 132, vii. 56. Ep. P. B. 

ii. 8. Ad Leon. i. 10. In 

Quint. Nov. 122. Ad Patr. 

55. Epit. Da. 101, 152, 

204. 
habeto, El. v. 133. 
habitafle, Ma/if. 54. 
habitumque, Ad Salf. 18. 
habuifi'e, Epit. Da. 34. 
haftenus, Jfyo/. 5. J» Quint. 

Nov.A5. 
H ami i, JVtf*. &c. 2£. 
llamionio, £/. ii. 7. 
haerebantque, £/. iii. 2, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



haerebit, Epit. Da. 38. 
haerebunt, EL vii. 42, 
hseres, EL i. 29- I» Quint. 

Nov. 74. Ad. Patr. 60. 
haereticis, In Quint. Nov. 115. 
hsefit, EL vii. 6"9- 
halantemque, Man/. 40. 
Hama, £/. iv. 15. 
Hamburgh, £/. iv. 14. 
hafta. In Ob. Pr. 24. 
haurit, Epit. Da. 206. 
haufi, EL iv. 31. 
hauftaque, EL vi. 12. 
Hebes, Ad Salf. 23. 
Hecaerge, Manf. 4/. 
Heca'teia, In Ob. Pr. 17. 
He&ora, Jw 06. Pr. 14. 
hederam, EL iv. 16. 
hederas, Manf. 5. 
hei, £/. iv. 21, vii. 72. JEpif. 

Da. IP, 94. 
Helicon, /« 06. Pr. 32. 
helleboriimque, Epif. Da. 151. 
herba, EL v. 51, 87, vi. 60. 

.EpzY. Da. 130, 153. 
herbarum, In Ob. Pr. 23. 
herbas, Epit. Da. 152. 
herbis, Epit. Da. 40, 63. 
herb 6 fa, Manf. 45. 
herbofos, EL iii. 18. 
Herculeaeque, £/. vii. 40, 
Hercules, In Ob. Pr. 10. 
Herculeufque, EL vii. 40. 
Hermes, Dc Id. PL 33. Adj. 

Ro. 77. 
heroas, Manf. 33. 
heroafque, El. vi. 56. 
heroides, EL i. 6*3. 
heros, El. iv. 27. 
heroum, EL iii. 11. Maw/l 43. 
heroumque, Ad Patr, 46. JE/^if . 

Da. 205. 
herum, £/. iv. 48. 
Hefperiae, In Quint. Nov. 102. 
Hefperiis, EL v. 82. 
Hefperio, EL iii. 46. 
Hefperus, EL iii. 32. 



Hetrnrias, In Quint. Nov. 51. 

Hetrufci, Manf. 4. 

heu, -E7. iii. 38, iv. 71. Apol. 

9. J» Ob. Pr. 6. JVa*. &c. 

i. 16. Epit. Da. 63, 113. 
heus, Epit. Da. 147. 
hiantes, EL iv. 63. 
hiberni, El. vi. 11. 
hilaremque, £/. vi. 9. 
Ilimerides, JEpjY. Da. i„ 
hinnitus, El. iv. 121. 
hirquo, Ad Patr. 106. 
hirfuti, Epit. Da. 98. 
hirfutis, Jw Quint. Nov. 73. 
hifpida, £/. v. 139. 
haedos, Epit. Da. 141. 
Homeri, Manf. 23. 
Homero, El. i. 23. 
Homerus, E/. vi. 71. 
homines, Ad Leon. iii. 8. JE/wY. 

Da. 107. 
hominis, De Id. PL 22. 
hominum, hi Quint. Nov. 7g 

Nat. &c. 2. 
honeftus, ^d J. Ro. 67. 
honore, EL iv. 17. Manf. 3. 
honores, EL v. 29. i» Qw«tf a 

Nov. 223. JEpiY. Da. 214. 
honos, Epit. Da. 29. 
bora, Epit. Da. 110. 
horae, D< Ob. Pr. El. 39. 
horis, JVaf. &c. 7. 
horrea, is^. Da. 10. 
horrens, /» Quint. Nov. 153. 
horrentem, Irc Qjujif. Nov. 73. 
borribililque, Nat. &c. 22. 
horribiles, In Ob. Pr. 36. 
horrida, El. v. 34. In Quint. 

Nov. 214. 
horrificum, Ep. P. B. iii. 4. 
horrifono, EL iv. 101. 
horror, EL iv. S3. //* Qu//tf, 

Nov. 148. 
hortantur, £/. v. 6j. 
hortos, El. iii. 43. 
hofpes, Manf. 58. 
hofti, I/i Qwi'/?f. iW. 107. 



VERBAL INDEX: 



fcoftia, EL iv. 68. 
hoftis, In Quint. Nov. 6. 
humana, El. iii. 28. 
humani, In Ob. Pr. EL 12. 
humano, In Ob Pr. El. 66. 
humanum, El. vii. 9. De Id. 

PL 8. Ad Patr. 19. 
humentes, EL v. 90. 
humida, El. iii. 48. 
humilefque, Epit. Da. 151. 
humum, EL iv. 49, 90, 120. 

In Quint. Nov. 82. Ad J. 

Ro. 12. 
humus, EL v. 4, 42. 
Hundredam, In Salm. H. 1. 
hyacinthi, Epit. Da. 151. 
hyacinthina, £/. i. 6l. 
hyacinthus, /ft 0&. Pr. 44. 
Hyas, jfyiA Da. 88. 
hyeme, In Salm. 2. 
hyemem, Nat. &c. 55. 
Hylan, Epit. Da. 1. 
Hylas, £/. vii. 24. 
Hymen, EL v. 106. 
Hymenaee, EL v. 105. 
hymenseos, Epit. Da. 2VJ . 
Hymettus, EL v. 52. 
Hyperboreo, In Quint. Nov. 

95. Man/. 26. 
Hyperionios, Ad Patr. 99- 

I& J. 

I, EL iv. 2. Ad Patr. 93. 
Iaccho, EL vi. 27. 
I'acobo, I/i QwzVtf. iVw. 203. 
Iacobum, Ep. P. B. ii. 1. 
liicobus, Ep. P. B. iii. 1. In 

Quint Nov. 1. 
Iapeti, In Ob. Pr. 4. 
Iapetionidem, Ep. I.E. I. 
jacent, Ira Quz/if. JVor. 143. 
jaces, EL v. 89. 
Jacobsei, In Salm. II. 3. 
jadas, Ad Leon. iii. 2. 
jadat, Ad Patr. 82. 



jadet, EL 1. 70. 
jacuiffet, /« Ob. Pr. ] 2. 
jaculis, EL vii. 96. 
jaculantur, iVa*. &c. 52. 
jaculator, £/. vii. 71. 
jamque, £/. iv. 69, v. 4, 35, 

101, 129. In Quint. Nov* 

2, 25, 48, 11(). ^rf Pafr, 

103. 
janitor, In Quint. Nov. 137. 
janua, In Quint. Nov. 98. 
jafpide, EL iii. 7. 
ibat, Ep. P. B. iii. 12. 
Iberorum, In Quint. Nov. 103. 
Iberus, In Quint. Nov. 126. 
ibi, El. iv. 17. Maw/! 62. 
Ibida, Iw- 0/>. Pr. £/. IS. 
ibimus, ^a 7 Pa£r. 32. 
ibis, Epit. Da. 123. Ad. J. Ro, 

6'2, 6'3, 67. 
ibit, I» Q«wf. JV r or. 44. Nat, 

&c. 11, 66. Ad Salf. 3S. 

£/>#. Da. 22. 
Icaris, EL iv. 56. 
ida, El. vi. 38. 
idaque, In Quint. Nov. 3£. 
idu, Nat. &c. 20. ^d Pafr. 

110. 
id us, EL iv. 67. Epit. Da. 

196*. 
id, ^d Salf. 21. EpzV. Da. 33; 
Idaeam, El. v. 62. 
idem, Ad Salf. 17. Maw/I 56. 
Idumanii, Epit. Da. 90. 
Iefum, El. iv. 103. 
igitur, _E/. ii. 21,' iv. 39- In 

Quint. Nov. 68, 122. 
ignaviimque, Epit. Da. 25. 
igne, EL v. 9S, vii. 2, 12, 96. 

In Quint. Nov. 120. 
ignei, In 0b. Pr. EL 50. 
ignem, Ep. P. B. iii. 1. Nat. 

&c. 50. 
ignes, EL v. 52. 2» Quint. Nov. 

35, 199. 
ignefcunt, Jm Quint. Nov. 38. 
isjneus, -4d Patr. 35. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



igni, El. v. 93. Ep. P. B. iii. 

11. Epit. Da. 47. 
ignifluo, In Quint. Nov. 7. 
ignobile, Epit. Da. 19-3. 
ignotaque, In Ob. Pr. 22. 
ignotas, Epit. Da. 113. 
ignoto, EL iv. 84. 
ignotus, Epit, Da. 173. 
Hi, EL i. 45. 
Iliaca, EL ii. 13. 
Iliacae, £/. i. 68. 
ilice, ifara/". 62. 
Ilion, In Ob. Pr. 14. 
illaetabile, In Quint. Nov. 132. 
illic, EL i. 35, iii. 39, vi. 20. 

^d jCeora. ii. 7. Irc Q«m£ iVbt?. 

13, 127. Ad J. Ro. 70. 
illuc, EL iv. 78. Ira Quint. 

Nov. 160. 
illuni, Ira Quint. Nov. 22. 
illuftre, ^d J. Ro. 17. 
ima, JVaf. &c. 56. Ad Patr. 

22, 101. 
imagine, Ira Quint. Nov. 79* 

De I^. P/. 7. 
imago, EL iii. 3. 
imbelles, EL vii. 5. 
imber, EpY. Da. 60. 
imbre, Ira 06. Pr. EL 3. 
imbue, El. v. 86. 
ime, E/. vi. 75. 
imis, Ira Quint. Nov. 1 21. 
imitabere, JVaf. &c. 25. 
imitandaque, Ad Pair. 4>6. 

Man/. 43. 
immania, Man/. 67. 
immemor, Ira Quint. Nov. 93- 
immenfa, Ad Patr. 42. 
immenfos, Ad J. Ro. 22. 
fmmenfum, EL iv. 1. In Quint. 

Nov. 9. Epit. Da. 17. 
immerito, Ad Salf. 8. 
immerfa, JVa/. &c. 2. 
imminentes, ^d j". Ro. 34. 
immiti, Ira Quint. Nov, 186. 

Epit. Da. 20. 
immobilis, Ad Patr. 31. 



immortale, ^ef Pa/r. 37- Man/. 

53. 
immortales, Epit. Da. 217. 
immortali, -4c/ Leon. i. 8. 
immundafque, ^c/. J. Ro. 33. 
immundo, E/. v. 84. 
imo, Manf. 65. 
imoque, Nat. &c. 30. 
impafti, Epit. Da. 18, 26*, 35, 

44, 50, 57, 62, 68, 74, 81, 

87,93, 112, 124, 139, l6i f 

179. 
impellit, Ira Quint. Nov. 70. 
imperio, Ira Quint. Nov. 17. 
impervia, Ira Quint. Nov. 190. 
impetus, E/. iv. 69, vii. 58. 
impia, Ep. P. B. iv. 1. Ira 

Qwiref. iVw. 201. ^</. Salf. 

21. 
impiger, E/. vii. 17. Ad Chr. 

4. Ep/. Da. 196. 
impius, Ira Quint. Nov. 89. 
implebit, Ira Qui/*/. Nov. 108. 
implet, E/. vi. 44. Ira Qw7tf . 

JVov. 13. 
implicitos, EL v. 14. 
impotenfque, Ad Salf. 12. 
imprudens, 2Va/. &c. 16. Maw/. 

29. 
impune, In Quint. Nov. 44. 
imus, Epit. Da. 148. 
inacceffum, Ira Quint. Nov. 

18. 
inane, Ira Quint. Nov. 63. Nat. 

&c. 53. Ad Patr. 50. 
inani, Apol. 7. 
inania, EL vii. 9. 
inaffueto, E/. iv. 98. 
inauratas, Ira Quint. Nov. 134. 
incafium, Ira 06. Pr. 7. 
incautos, Ira Quint. Nov. 20. 
incedit, E/. iii. 57. £>e Id. PL 

22. 
inceptos, E/. vii. 86. 
incertaque, Ira Quint. Nov. 

212. 
inceffu, ^t/. 5a// 2. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



inceftos, EL i. 46. 
incipiamus, EL v. 27. 
incifas, Nat. &c. 5. 
includitur, EL vi. 7. 
inclyta, Ad. J. Ro. 50. 
inclytumque, De Id. PL 31. 
incolit, i» Quint. Nov. 157. 
incolitis, Iw Sa//». 2. 
incorruptus, De JW. PL 9* 
Incredibili, Apol. 3. 
anculto, El. i. 32. 
incultum, Man/. 35. 
incunabula, ^c? J. Ro. 18. 
inde, £/. vi. 53, vii. 70. 
indelibata, £/. i. 41. 
indeplorata, Epit. Da. 28. 
indigenas, Manf.79- 
indignaro, In Quint, Nov, 159» 
Indis, Nat. &c. 45. 
indocilifque, Add, EL vii. 4. 
indolem, ^d 5a//I l6. ^d J". 

JRo. 26. 
induit, In Quint. Nov* 205, 

206. 
induitiirque, EL v. 3. 
indulgentia, EL i. 85. 
indulfit, Ad J. Ro. 10. 
induxitque, EL iv. 34. 
inenarrabile, ^ri Pair, 37» 
inerme, £/. iv. 109, vii. 72. 
iners, EL vi. 42. ifd Leo«. ii. 

8. Apol. 6. 
inerti, ^d. P<rtr. 103. 
ineft, EL i. 40. 
infamia, El. i. 87. 
infamis, 'J« Ob. Pr. 19. -fo 

Quint. Nov. 51. 
infandam, i>? Quint. Nov. 132. 
infandum, £/>. P. />. i. 2. 
infeliciter, £/. vii. 91. 
infelix, EL i. 41, vii. 85. 
infenfos, EL vi. 66. 
inferni, Ep. P. B. ii. 6. 
infeftat, In Quint. Nov, 23. 

AdSalf.19. 
inflat, £/. vi. 23. 
iufulas, £/, iii. 56, 



ingenio, EL i. 16. 

ingenium, EL iii. 38, v. 23, 

^tf J. #0. 74. 
ingeniuraque, EL v. 5, vi. 29, 

Man/, 77. 
ingens, £/. vii. 39. De Id, PL 

22. Man/. 50. 
ingentique, iWtf. &c. 69, 
inglorius, Epit. Da. 174, 
ingratus, EL iv. 104. 
ingreditur, In Quint, Nov. 

75. 
ingrefia, EL iii, 5. 
ingruat, EL v. 140. 
inhumata, In Quint. Nov, 144 
inique, In Quint. Nov, 185. 
inje&o, In Quint. Nov, 121. 
innocuos, EL iv. 89, vi. 60. 
innuba, Epit. Da. 65. 
innumeris, El. iii. 48. In Quint, 

Nov. 182. 
Inogeniae, Epit, Da. 163. 
inopefque, Ad Pair. 57* 
inopina, Epit, Da, 110. 
inopfque, EL iv. 84. 
inque, EL iv. 115. Epit. Da. 

67,98. 
inquietum, 7w 0£. Pr. £/. 15. 
inquit, EL v. 81, vii. 27. 
inianientis, Ad. Salf. 12. 
infano, Ad Leon. ii. 2. 
infatiable, Nat. &c. 14. 
infcia, Maw/. 8. 
infcius, El. vii. 38. 
infcripfit, Man/. 7. 
infequitur, I» Quint. Nov. 21. 
iniidet, £/. vii. 70. 
infidiafque, In Quint. Nov. 19, 
infidiis, In Quint. Nov. 2l6. 
infidiofa, EL vi. 74. Ep. P. B, 

ii. 4. 
infignia, In Sahn. 7. 
infilit, EL vii. 70. 
infoliti, EL vii. 73, 
inibnat, El, vi. 38. 
in ions, Ad J. Ro. 9. 
infonuere, EL v, 99, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



itoftar, Ei. vi. 90. 
inftitoris, Ad J. Ro. 42» 
inftituis, El. v. 26. 
inftrepitant, In Quint* Nov. 

178. 
infula, In Ob. Pr. EL 13. 
infulis, Ad Pair. 72. 
infulfi, AdJ.Ro.42: 
integer, El. vi. 8 
integro, Ad J. Ro. 84. 
intempeitivis, El. iii. 10. 
intententque, EL iv. 108. 
interdum, EL i. 40. 
interea, £/. i. 91. 
interfluus, Ad Pair. 87* 
interiora, EL v. 18. 
interjecti, EL iv. 21. 
interponere, £p*Y. Da. 11 9. 
interque, /?* 06. Pr. 47. 
intexit, £/. v. 63. 
iniima, EL vi. 33. 
intonat, Epit. Da. 29. 
intonfos, Ad. Pair. 45. 
intonuit, ^tf J. Ro. 11. 
intortis, J* Qmm£. Nov. 145. 
intra, £/. i. 75. 
jntremuit, EL iii. 58. 
intuiturque, EL v. 19. 

intus, EL v. 12, vii. 74. 

inulta, In Quint. Nov. 44. 

inultus, Ep. P. B. iii. 5. 

inutile, 77. ii. 19. Man/. 35. 

invadat, In Quint. Nov. 126. 

invecta, EL i. 81. 

inveni, In Quint. Nov. 41. 

invenies, EL iv. 41. 

invenit, Epit. Da. 108. 

invia, Ad Chr. 5. 

jnvitfa?, Man/. 82. 

inviclam, EL v. 101. 

invida, EL iii. 27. 

invidae, In Ob. Pr. 13. 

invidia, Ad J, Ro. 76. 

invidiaque, Ad Patr. \06. 

inviolabile, Ep. P. B. i. 7. I» 
Quint, Nov, 3, 

invifam, EL v. 55. 

VOlo I. 



invitum, E/. i. 10. 
Io, EL iv. 81, v. 28, 106.. 
Iogernen, Epit. Da, 166. 
Ion, Ad. J. Ro. 56, 60. 
Icnio, EL i. 23. 
Iordanios, Ep. P. B. i. 8. 
Jove, £/. vi. 55. In Ob, Pr. 
16. In Quint, Nov. 36. Ad 
Salf. 13. 
Jovem, EL i. 64, ii. 6, vi. 

78. 
Jovi, EL iii. 16, iv. 26, vii. 22, 

EpJl.B. 4. 
Jovis, £/. i. 54, v. 37, v ii* 42. 
De Id. PL 5, 13. Ad. Patr. 
80. Ad J. Ro. 46. 
Jovifque, In Ob. Pr. EL 40. 
ira, I« 06. Pr. EL 15. 
iras, £/. iii 17, vii. 11, 25. In, 

Ob. Pr. EL 30. 
irata, In Ob. Pr. 38. 
iratos, El. iv. 68. 
ire, EL ii. 12. In Ob. Pr. 8. 
Ad Patr. 68, 76. Epit. Da. 
41, 114. 
irrigat, Ira Quint. Nov. 136. 
irriguas, v4d Patr. 2. 
irriguos, Ma/^. 6l. 
irrita, EL i. 4&. 
irritus, In Quint. Nov. 114. 
irruens, Ad Salf. 39. 
irruet, £/. vi. 43. 
Ifidis, De Jrf. PL 3.4. 
Ifidos, I/i Qtfin^. Nov. 186. 
ita, 2rc Quijit. Nov. 156. 
ltalas, A r a£. &c. 29. 
Itali, Ad Salf. 14. 
Italus, Ad Patr. 83. 
ite, Epit. Da. 18, 26, 35, 44, 
50, 57, 62, 68, 74, 81, 87, 
93, 112,124,139,161,179, 
203. 
iter, EL iii. 34, iv. 4 . v. 33. 
Ep. P. B. ii. 10. Manf. 53 
AdJ.Ro. 17. 
iterat, £/. i. 43. 
iterum, El. i. 90, iv. 126, r. 



VERBAL TNDEX. 



104. In Quint. Nov. 128. 

Ad J. Ro. 43, 
iterumque, El. v. 7» 
itidem, Man/. 13. Ad J.Ro. 

10. 
itque, EL vii. 54, 
iture, EL vi. 66. 
jubar, EL iii. 54, vii. 16. 
jubebas, Ad Pair. 68. 
jubeo, In Qtiint. Nov. 160. 

Maw/. 25. ^frf J. #o. 75. 
jucunda, Ad Patr. 75. 
judicia, Ad J. Ro. 83. 
judicis, EL vi. 90. 
judicium, In Ob. Pr, 41. 
juga, EL v. 124. 
jugales, El. iv. 9, v. 137* 
jugera, £ptY« Da. 149- 
jugi, £/. iv. 30. In Quint. Nov. 

142. 
jugiter, Ad J. Ro. 1$. 
jugo, ^d J. ite. 66. 
jugum, Add EL vii. 6. 
juncofas, EL i. 89. 
juncti, Ad Patr. 62. 
jungat, JE7. v. 114. 
Junonia, EL iii. 81. Nat. &c. 

23. 
Junonis. Ad Salf. 5. 
junxit, Manf. 7. 
Jupiter, EL v. 117, 135, vii. 41. 

Nat. &c. 16. Ad Patr. 96. 

Manf. 70. 
jura, In Quint. Nov. 96. Ad 

Patr. 72. Manf. 86. Epit. 

Da. 207. 
jure, Epit. Da. 146. 
jurgiaque, In Quint. Nov. 146. 
juris, Ad Patr. 109. 
jus, EL iii. 18. 
juffa, El. i. 8, ii. 16. In Quint. 

Nov. 124. 
juflit, EL iv. 104. JVaf. &c. 

36. 
jufius, El. ii. 11. 
jufta, EL iv, 82. /» 0b. Pr. El. 

5,42. 



jultiffima, Nat. &c. 66. 
jufto, ^d J. Ro. 48. 
juvabit, -4rf Patr. 50. 
juvant, £pi/. Do. 66. 
juvat, £/. i 5, 39t iii. 28, v, 

50, vii. 80. 
juvencae, In Quint, Nov. 185. 
juvenci, Epit. Da. 94. 
juvenes, EL v. 105. In Quint. 

Nov. 217. 
juvenefcere, EL ii. 7« 
juveni, ^d Patr. 98. 
juvenile, A T af. &c. 41. 
juvenilia, Ad Patr. 115. 
juvenilis, EL vii. 58. 7w Quint. 

Nov. 225. ^(/ J. Ro. 5. 
juvenis, EL vii. 21. Manf. 26. 
juventae, .Epil. D«. 83. 
juventam, £/. v. 3. 
juventus, El. vi. 63. Epit. Da. 

212, 126. 
juventutis, Ad Salf 16. 



L. 



labe, EL vi. 64. £jhY. D«. 212. 

labiis, £7. vii. 70. 

labor, In Quint. Nov* 114. 

Manf. 96. 
labore, EL iii. 64. 
labores, Ad J. Ro. 73. Manf. 

64. 
labra, 2sp«7. Da. 157» 
laceratus, £/. iv. 101. 
lacrymabile, In Quint. Nov. 4$. 
lacrymae, Epit. Da. 202, 203. 
lacrymans, EL iii. 31. 
lacrymante, In 0b. Pr. 16. 
lacrymas, Ad Patr. 55. 
lacrymis, EL i. 40, ii. 22. 
ladeas, In Ob. Pr. El. 60 
laenea, El. iv. 34. 
lffifitfet, In 0b. Pr. 25. 
keta, EL iv. 32, 93 f v. 45. 
laetaque, Epit. Da. 21 6. 
laetare, Ad J. Ro. 43. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



lseto, El. ill. 58. Epit. Da. 140. 
laetus, El. i. 20. In Ob. Pr. 34. 

In Quint. Nov. 45. Man/. 

100. 
IsevEi, ^Jc? El. vii. 1. 
laeve, 2s7. iv. 2. 
lambunt, is/, iii. 45. 
lampade, Nat. &c. 27. 
lances, Nat. &c. 35. 
languentem, El. v. 81. 
languentefque, £/. v. 93* 
lapfa, El. vi. 48. 
lapfu, Nat, &c. 37* 
lapfus, El. iii. 22. ^d /. Ro. 

23. 
lare, JE7. vi. 69. 
lares, is7. iv. 126. 
laris, El. i. 12. 
larga, EL vi. 55. 
largus, In Salm. 5. 
larva, In Ob. Pr. 15. 
lafciva, El. v. 95. 
lata, Jra Qzmtf. .Nov. 173. Ad 

Patr. 69. 
late, El. i. 74, iv. T5. In 

Quint. Nov. 187. iVa*. &c. 

67. Ad Patr. 47- Man/. 32. 
Jatebra, <<4d /. ito. 41 
latemus, El. i. 47- 
latent, Epit. Da. 54. 
latentes, ira Quint. Nov. lp. 
lateque, Ira Quint. Nov. 2. 
lateri, £/. vii. 42. Ad Patr. 76. 

Epit Da. 38. 
lates, Ep. P. B. ii. 2. 
latet, El. v. 129. Itt Qwi/tf. 

Nov. 201. 
Latiale, £p. P. B. iii. 3. 
latices, £/. iv. 31. Epit. Da. 

206. 
Latii, Ad Patr. 80. 
Latinag, Ad J. Ro. 71. 
latit&nfque, El. v. 129- 
latitant, In Quint. Nov. 151. 
kto, £/. iii, 37. -fa QwVtf. J\ T ov. 

103* 



latrata, El. vi. 58. 
latuere, EL v. 123. 
latuit, El. vii. 67. 
latus, £/. iv. 109. 
laudato, El. i. 63. 
laudavit, Ep. J. B. 1. 
laudes, In Quint. Nov. 19U 

Ad Patr. 55, 11 9. Manf. 

43. £piY. Da. 31. 
laudi, Man/. 1. 
laureta, ^d Patr. 16, 
lauri, Maw/. 92. Epit. Da, 

180. 
lauro, 2i7. v. 13, vi. 16. 
laurofque, Ad Patr. 102. Manf, 

5. 
laus, 2s7. i. 24. 
lauto, El. vi. 29. 
laxatum, Ad Patr, 3# 
laxus, Ad Salf. 39, 
lecta, Apol. 2. 
le&as, Maw/. 41. 
leclo, EL vii. 17- J» Quint* 

Nov. 106. Man/. 87* 
ledum, Ad Salf. 5. 
legat, Epit. Da. 175* 
lege, .Epzf, Da. 95, 165. 
legentum, u4d J". Ro. 80. 
legeris, ^c? /. Ro. 70. 
leges, EJ. vii. 1. Nat. &c. 5. 

De Id. PI. 5. -4a 7 Patr. 7U 

Manf. 9. 
legibus, In 0b. Pr. 2. 
legit, Apol. 2. 
Lemniacos, El. vii. 82. 
Lemnon, JWcif. &c. 23. 
lene, £/. v. 89. 
leni, In Ob. Pr, El. 26* 
lenibat, Manf, 64. 
lenire, Epit. Da. 45. 
lenta, Epit. Da. 180. 
lente, EL v. 137. 
lento, El. iv. 56. ife/. 74. 
leo, ls7. iv. 64. 
leones, In Quint. Nov, 8& 

Epit. Da. 41. 



c 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Leonora, Ad Leon, i. 3, ii. 1, 3. 
lepidos, El, vi, 12. 
lepidum, El, i. 7« 
lepores, Epit. Da. 56. 
lepori, Epit. Da. 14-3. 
Lepos, Epit. Da. 127 '. 
Lefbium, Ad Salf 22. 
Lethaeo, Epit, Da, 201. 
lethalia, El. v. 99- 
Lethen, In Quint, Nov, 132* 

Ad J. Ro. 45. 
Lethes, De Id. PL 20. 
letho, Epit. Va, 103. 
levamen, Ad Salf. 30. 
Jevare, EL iv. 58. 
leve, EL v. 69. 
leves, El, v. 11 6. In Quint* 

Nov. 14-9, 161. 
levi, EL iii. 44. , 
leviora, iWtf. &c. 53. 
levis, EL iii. 47, vi. 49. JEpiY. 

Da. 146. 
leviflima, In Quint. Nov, 183. 
leviter, El, vii. 44. 
libafle, Ad Pair, 92. 
libata, Epit, Da. 213. 
libebit, ^d Pair, 89. 
libelle, ^/c? J. Ro. 37. 
libens, £p£. Da. 102. 
libenter, Ad Salf. 26. 
Jiber, El, iv. 16, vi. 51. Ad 

J. Ro. i. 13. 
libera, El. i. 25. 
libet, El. i. 15. 
Libitina, El, iii. 4. 
libri, £/. i. 26. 
libris, EL vi. 82. 
Libyco, EL iv. 26. 
Libycofque, In Quint. Nov. 

89- 
licent, El, vi. 53. 
licet, El. i. 25, ii. 5, vii. 41, 

86. Epit. Da. 171, 172. 
licet, De Id. PL 29- Ad Pair. 

89. Manf, 58. Epit. Da, 

174. Ad J.Ro. 2, 37. 
iicuiffet, Epit. Da. 121. 



licuit, EL iv. 37. 
lilia, £/. iii. 19. 
limina, Manf 55. 
limine, Nat. &c. 24. 
limpida, In Ob. Pr. 20. 
lingua, Ad J. Ro. 79. 
linguae, El. iv. 38. Ad Patr* 

79. 
linguas, E^tV. Da. 76. 
Unguis, J?i Quint. Nov. 191. 
Linon, £/. vi. 68. 
linquens, Ad, Salf. 10. Epit. 

Da, 111. 
linquere, £/. i. 86. 
linquis, Epit. Da. 21. 
liquentis, In Ob. Pr. EL 3; 
liquidam, Ad Leon. iii. 1. 
liqujcla, EL v. 15. 
liquido, EL iii. 23. Irc Quint. 

Nov. 45. 
liquit, Ep. P. jB. i. 8. 
lite, El. i. 31. 
litera, £/* iv. 1. 
littora, Epit. Da. 186. 
littore, El. iii. 34, iv. 52. 

£pc*. Da. 99. 
littoreamque, Ad Leon. iii. 3. 
littoris, El. iv. 88. 
littus, El. v. 106. 
liventi, Ma/?/. 89. 
livore, Ad J. Ro. 85. 
loca, In Quint. Nov. 188, 21 6. 

Nat. &c. 42. £piY. Da. 8, 

39- 
locat, In Quint. Nov. 19. 
loci, EL i. 50. la 06. Pr. EL 

67. De Id. PL 15. 
locis, El. iv. 72, vii. 72. 
loco, Ad Salf. 3. Manf. 66. 
locorum, In Quint. Nov. 63, 
locos, El. iii. 51. 
Locro, In Ob. Pr. 16. 
locum, In Quint. Nov. 148. 
locus, El. i. 14. In Quint. Nov* 

139. 
Londini, Ad Salf, 9. 
Londinum, EL i, 73* 



VERBAL INDEX, 



longa, EL v. 36, v. 2. In 

Quint. Nov. 155. Manf. 37- 
longaeva, Manf. 74. 
longam, Epit. Da. 46. 
longe, Ad J. Ro. 79- 
longeque, In Ob. Pr. El. 56. 
longinqua, El. i. 7. 
longiffima, In Quint. Nov. 58. 
longo, Apol. 5. In Quint. Nov. 

166, 197. 
longos, De Id. PL 30. 
longinquum, Ad J. Ro. 11. 
longum, Manf. 25. 
longumque, Epit. Da. 29. 
ioquacis, Epit. Da. 51. 
loquax, In Quint. Nov. 191. 
loquelam, Ad. Pair. SO. 
loqui, El. iv. 50, vii. 88. 
loquitur, Ad Leon. i. 10. Ad 

Patr. 85. 
lora. El. v; 39. 
loro, Ad. Salf 39. 
Loxo, Manf 46. 
lubrica, Epit. Da. 198. 
luce, EL 39, vii. 55. In. Quint. 

Nov. 188. Nat. &c. 44. Ad 

Patr. 100. 
lucem, In Quint. Nov. 54. In 

Ob. Pr. EL 38. 
lucemque, Ad Patr. 117. 
lucentia, In Quint. Nov. 6l. 
lucida, Ad Chr. 2. 
lucidi, In Ob. Pr. El. 51. 
luciferas, El. v. 46. 
Luciferi, El. Hi. 50. 
luco, El. v. 6*1. 
lucos, Je? Salf. 33. Ad J. Ro. 

61. 
lucratur, Manf. 75. 
lucri, Ad Patr. 69. 
luchbus, Epit. Da. 8. 
luctu, El. vii. 85. 
lu&uofa, In Quint. Nov. 43. 
Lucumonis, Epit. Da. 128. 
lucus, EL i. 49, v. 132, 133. 
iudit, EL v. 117. 
liadunt, Epit. Da. 94. 



luge, El. ii. 21. 

luget, Jw Ob. Pr. 3L 

luimus, ^4d J. Ro. 27. 

kit, £/. i. 46. 

lumbos, In Qui?it. Nov. 84. 

lumen, De Id. PL 25. 

lumina, EL i. 55, iv. 37, v. 88, 

94, vi..68, vii. 15, $9- dd 
' Leon. ii. 7. In Quint. Nov. 

154, 186, 187. In Ob. Pr. 

El. 2. Ad Patr. 98. Epit. 

Da. 194. Ad J. Ro. 71. 
lumine, i>* Quint. Nov. 134, 

Manf.71, 99- 
luminibus, £/. vii. 59* 
lima, Epit. Da. 140. 
lunse, De Id. PL 18. 
lupos, I» Qwi/iJ. .BToiu 89. 

EpzY. Da. 42. 
lupus, Epit. Da. 27. 
lurida, Ep. I. B. 3. Nat. &c, 

52. 
luridum, /# Quifit. Nov. 35. 
lu fit, <4d. /. Pio. 8. 
luftra, Ira Quint. Nov. 87. 
luftrabam, ££. iv. 30. 
luftmlibus, EL vi. 65. 
luftrarit, Manf 71. 
luflrifles, In Ob. Pr. 35. 
lufus, Apol. 7, ^ P^r. 115. 
lufuque, Epit. Da. 85. 
lutea, Manf. 39. 
lux, £/. vi. 88, vii. 14, 62. 

Epit. Da. 156. 
.luxi, EL iii. 13. 
luxu, Ad J. Ro. 28. 
luxuriat, EL v. 125. 
luxuriofa, EL v. 58. 
luxus, ^ Salf 39. 
Lyaeum, £/. vi. 21. 
Lycambis, In Ob. Pr. EL 21. . 
Lycaonius, EL v. 35. 
Lycidae, Epit. Da. 132. 
Lydorum, Epit. Da. 138. 
lympha, El. v. 83, vi. 6l. 
lynces, Manf. 69. 
lyra, Epit. Da. 218. 



VERBAL INDEX; 



ivr», Ad Leon, ii. 6. 
Lyricen, El. vi. 27. 



M. 



Machaon, In Ob. Pr. 23. 
machina, Nat. &c. 69. 
maculofi, Man/, 69. 
madeant, EL ii. 22. 
madens, £/. vi. 27* 
madentes, Jw 06. Pr. EL 1. 
madidis, Mff«/. 87. 
madidos, EL v. 63. 
Maenalius, EL v. 125. 
magis, In Quint. Nov. 33. -^c? 

Patr. 19, 25, 73. jEpif. Da. 

96. 
magifter, In Salm. H. 3. J» 

Qtwwf. i^ov. 17. 
magiftra, ^(dd. £/. vii. 4. 
magittri, EL i. 15, vi. 59» 
magiftro, Epit. Da. 154. 
magiftrum, Epit. Da. 67* 
magna, EL ii. 17, iii- 14. 
magnanimo, EL iv. 124, 
magnanimos, Manf. '83. 
magni, Mmtf* 24. 
magnis, Ad Salf. 3, 8. 
magniloquis, ^fi Pa£r. 81. 
magno, Manf, 6, 73. 
magnos, Epit, Da. 41. 
magnum, Manf. 58. 
magnus, £/. iv. 25. In Quint. 

Nov. 11 6. De Id. PL 33. 

Epit. Da. 190. 
Maie, El. vii. 14. 
major, Ep. J. B. 3. -4&? Leon. 

i. 3. Jm 06. Pr. 29. De /g 7 . 

P/. 24. 
majora, ^tf 1 Pa^r. 78, 95. 
mala, £/. iv. 124, vi. 19. Ep. 

P. B. u 4. Manf. 39. ^d J. 

Jlo. 37. 
matt, E/. i. 14, v. 129, vii. 59. 

Nat. &c. 11. Ad Patr. 71. 
uialedidtio, In Quint. Nw, 100. 



male fid ae, EL i. $7. 
malefidus, Ira Quint. Nov. 131 = 
malefanus, /4c? Patr. 93. 
mali, ££ vii. 62. In Ob. Pr. 

EL 7. 
male-, ApoL 1. JVatf. &c. 18. 
malorum, EL iv. 71, 
malum, ^/?e>/, 4. 
malus, £/. vii, 65. Add, EL 

vii. 3. -E/ttY. Da. 48. 
mane, Nat. &c. 47. 
manent, Is/, vi. 49. Epit, Da, 

36. 
Manes, In Quint. Nov. 149. 

Ad Patr. 23. Maw/ 15. 
manet, EL v. 51. 
manibus, Jra Quint. Nov. 59* 
manifeftum, EL iv. 57. 
Manfe, Manf. 1, 2, 25. 
manfuefcit, ^d Pa/r. 3£. 
manfueti, Manf 60. 
Manfus, £/>#. Da. 182. 
manu, £/. vi. 38. Ad Chr. 6. 
manus, EL iii. 28, iv. 52, 67 t 

100, vi. 64, vii. 40. ApoL 8« 

Ad J. Ro. 4. 
manufque, In Ob. Pr. 2. 
marcefcant, EL iii. lp. 
marcefcet, Nat. &c. 8. 
marcefcit, Epit. Da. 65. 
Mareotidas, In Quint, Nov,/ 

171. 
mari, EL v. 104. 
maria, Epit. Da. 119* 
Mariana, In Quint. Nov. 127, 
Marini, Manf. 51. 
marine-, In Quint. Nov. 26. 
Marinum, Manf 8. 
maris, E/«f. Da. 185. 
marmor, -^d Patr. 8S. 
marmore, £/. iii. 5. Manf 91, 
marmoreas, £/. v. 105. 
Maro, £/. i. 24. 
Mars, EL iv. 78. 
marfupii, In Salm. II. 4. 
Marte, In Quint, Nov, 115. 

itfflfi/. S3. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Martem, EL iv. 77. 
Maurufius, Ad Pair, 40. 
Maffica, EL vi. 31. 
mater, EL v. 82, 126. Nat. 

&g. 9- De Id. PL 3. 
maternae, Ad Leon. ii. 6. 
matre, £/. vi. 52. 
matris y EL v. 96. Jrc Quint. 

Nov. 181. 
matutino, £/. iii. 40, v. 54. 
matutinum, EL vii. 16. 
mavis, I» Quint. Nov. 106. 
Mavortigenae, /» Quint. Nov. 

53. 
maxima, Ad Pair. 9. 
maxime, EL vii. 4. 
maximus, De /d. P/. 38. 
Mecaenatis, Man/. 4. 
medentum, In Ob. Pr. 22. 

E^r. Da. 150, 153. 
medias, £/. i. 80, vii. 54. 
medica, EL ii. 9. 
medicos, £/. v. 73. Epit. Da, 

150. 
mediis, In Ob. Pr. 32. 
medio, In Quint. Nov. 12. 

Epit. Da. 51, 185. 
meditata, EL vi. 89. J« Quint, 

Nov. 203. 
meditantur, Manf:l. 
meditatur, Ad Patr. 7. 
Melanchsetemque, J» Quint. 

Nov. 71. 
meliora, £p. P. 5. ii. 3. 
melioribus, EL iv. 125. 
melius, £/. v. 85, vii. 43. Ad 

Patr. 40. 
mellitafque, EL v. 68. 
melos, In Salm. H. 8. Ad 

Patr. 37. ^</ Salf. 22. ^ft* 

/.Bo. 11. 
membra, EL iii. 35, iv. 101. 

InOb.Pr. 41. 
membratim, J/t Quint, JVcw. 

U9. 
memento, £/. iv. 123. 
memini, EL iii. 9, J£, 



meminifle, Epzf. D«. 125. 
meminiftis, Epit. Da. 2. 
meminit, El. vii. 33. 
Memnoniamque, EL i. 66*. 
memor, 22/. iv. 50, vii. 65. In 

Quint. Nov. 102. 
memorant, Man/. 46. 
memoraffe, In Quint. Nov* 

196. 
memoria, De Id. PL 3. 
Menalcam, Epit. Da. 132. 
mendaces, Epit. Da. 167. 
mendax, In Quint. Nov. 192. 
mendicantum, In Quint. Nov, 

58. 
mens, EL v. 15. Ad Leon. i. 5. 

Nat. &c. 2. £piY. Da, 14. 
men fa, 22/. vi. 29. 
menfas, Man/ 82.- 
menfus, £/. iii. 34. 
mente, ^aW. EL vii. 1, Man/, 

98. £ptf. Da. 145. 
mentem, ^a 7 Patr. 73. 
mentes, Epit. Da. 197. 
menti, De Id. PL 12. Ad 

Patr. 114. 
mentis, El. vi. 30. Maw/*. 77- 
meofque, In Quint. Nov. 202. 
meque, EL i. 10. Ire Quint, 

Nov. 202. 
merces, £/>/£. Da. 173. 
meremur, Epit. Da. 173, 
merenti, Ad Patr. 111. 
merito, EL iv. 59. Ad Patr, 

60. 
Merlini, Epit. Da. 168. 
mero, EL iv. 32, vi. 54. 
merui, Ad Chr. 3. 
meruifti, In Quint. Nov. 194?. 
merum, El. vi. 24. 
meffes, El. v. 59. 22piY. Da, 

10. 
metallis, Epif. Da. 177. 
metiri, Nat. &c. 4. 
metra, EL vi. 32. 
metu, In Quint. Nov, 125« 
metuenda, EL iii. 6. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



metuit, EL iii. 8. Add. El. 

vii. 9. 
metus, El. iv. 106, vii. 50. 
micant, El. v. 100. 
micuerunt, In Quint. Nov. 80. 
migrabis, De Id. PL 39- ' 
miles, EL i. 30. 
milite, El. i. 82, iv. 93. In 

Quint. Not. 108. 
milites, In Ob. Pr. El. 47. 
nrilitiae, El. vi. 8. 
mille, EL Hi. 25, vii. 72. In 

Quint Nov. 75, 147. Ad 
' Patr. 58. 
millenifque, In Quint. Nov. 

391. 
millia, EL iv. 108. 
3 millibus, Ad Patr. 59. ,Ep*V. 
Da. JOS. 

Milto, ^/ &?//: 9. 

milvas, J5p£. D«. 103. 
rcinaci, EL vii. 49. 
minantis, EL vii. 19. 
minas, El. i. 15, vii. 26. Jw 

06. Pr. El. 28. 
minatus, Z?i Salm. H. 7- 
minax, Ep. P. B. iii. 4. 
jViinervse, Manf. 21. 
miniftra, £/. i. 78. 
miniftros, In Quint. Nov. 164. 
minorem, Nat. &c. 58. 
minuit, In Quint. Nov. 193. 
minus, El. vii. 96. ^ Salf. 3. 
miracula, £/. i. 53. 
mirandus, Epit. Da. 103. 
mirantur, Epit. Da. 82. 
mirata, El. i. 35. 
miratus, In Ob. Pr. El. 6l. 
miretur, EL iii. 22. 
miror, EL iii. 52. 
mirum, El. vi. 35. Ad Leon. i. 

3. Ad Patr. 6l. Epit. Da. 

183. 
mifcebor, Ad Patr. 103. 
mifcet, El. vii. 22. -E/hY. Da. 

49. 
mifer, £/. vii. 27, 100. ^/^ 



Xeo//.- ii. 3. In Ob. Pr. EP 

31. Epit. Da. 4, 86. 
miferat, El. iv. 92. 
miferatus, Ad. I. Ro. 26. 
miferefcit, In Quint. Nov. 220. 
miferis, EL v. 135. 
mifero, EL vii. 75. 
miferius, In Salm, 3. 
mifi, EL vii. 59- 
mifimus, Manf. 41. 
mifit, jE/. iii. 62, iv. 11(>, 
miffa, In Ob. Pr. El. 35. 
miliums, Ep. P. B. i, 5. 
miffus, EL ii. 14, iv. 12. 

Manf. 26. ^rf J. Jlo. 15. 
mifta, El. vi. 18. Epit. Da. 

218. 
mite, I?i Ob. Pr. 45. 
miti, JJfe/. 71 . 
mitia, £/. v. 60. 
mitis, Ep. P. B.\. 3. 
mittet, EL iv. 52. 
mitto, El. vi. 1, 
modeftos, EL iv. 49. 
modico, ^d Pair. 43. 
modis, £/. vi. 22. 
modo, EL iv. 48, 6l, v. 24, vi. 

79, vii. 51, 52, 101. Ep. P. 

jB. iv. 1. In Salm. H. 6. In 

Quint. Nov. 193. Manf 83. 

Epit. Da. 37. Ad J. Ro. 25. 
modos, El. i. 92, ii. 23. Epit. 

Da. 89. 
modulamen, Ad Patr. 50. 
modulantes, Manf. 30. 
modulantefque, EL vi. 85. 
modulatur, El. v. 113. 
modulis, E/. vi. 7, ^/c? Pa£r, 

59. 

modulos, EL v. 26. 
mcenia, El. i. 75, 86 iv. 14. 
mcenibus, EL iv. 113. 
mcerct, El. i. 45. 
mcefta, EL ii. 24. J/* 0&. Pr. 

EL 5. In Quint. Nov. 11. 
moellaque, In Quint, Nov. 135. 
inoeftas, EL iv. 66. 



VERBAL INDEX 



mceftus, El. iii. 1. 

mole, In Ob. Pr. EL 37. 

Nat. &c. 58. 
moleftum, Ad Pair. 92. 
molle, Epit. Da. 48. 
molles, El. i. 13. 
raolli, Ire 06. Pr. 42. In QwVtf. 

JNTor. 76. 
mollia, El. vii. 6. 
mollior,£/. v. 87- Epit. Da. 130. 
mollique, Ad J. Ro. 28. 
mollis, Man/. 12. 
molliter, £Z. vi. 38. Man/. 90. 
Molyos, El. i. 88. 
mone, Ire Quint. Nov. 123. 
monitis, El. iv. 40. 
monftra, De Id. PL 36. 
monftrificam, El. vi. 73. 
monftrofus, In Quint. Nov. 37. 
monte, Ep. P. B. ii. 2. 
montes, EL iv. 29. 
montibus, El. v. 1 S . IVa £.&c. 64. 
monumenta, De Itf*. P/. 5. 

AdJ.Ro. 51. 
Mopfus, iipif. Da. 75, 76. 
mora, El. iii. 35, v. 33, vii. 69. 

Iji Quint. Nov. 208. 
mora?, In Ob. Pr. 8. Ad Pair. 

31. 
moras, EL iv. 3, 70. 
moratam, In Mor. 2. 
morborum, Ad Salf. 24. 
mordaces, Epit. Da. 46. 
more, In Quint. Nov. 211. 

Ad Pair. 44. Manf. 45. 
morem, De Id. PL 14. 
mores, £/. vi. 64. 
morefque, Manf. 21. 
Mori, In Mor. 1. 
moriens, Maw/. 13. 
morientibus, Epit. Da. 40. 
morientis, Epit. Da. 122. 
morigeramque, In Mor. 2. 
mors, £/. ii. 4, iii. 6, 16. In 

Ob. Pr. 5. I« OK Pr, EL 

31, 32. 



mortalia, Ad Leon. i. 7. 
mortalibus, EL vii. 63. 
mortem, In Ob. Pr. 10. 
mortis, In Ob. Pr. 40. 
mota, EL vii. 18. ^o/. 6. 
motu, EL v. 11. I?i Quint, 

Nov. 199. 
movens, 17. i. 44. 
movent, EL v. 68. 
movere, -4d Leow. ii. 6. 
mo vet, JSpzV. Da. 92. 
movit, Ep. P. B. iii. 4. 
mox, Ire QttzVtf. iVox?. 213. Ad 

J. Ro. 10. 
mucrone, El. vii. 47. 
mugentium, In Salm. 9. 
mulcebit, £Z. v. sg. Ad Salf. 

32. 
mulcentem, EL iv. 42. 
mulcenturque, Manf. 69. 
mul&ralia, In Quint. Nov. 

178. 
multa, Ad Salf. 17. 
multaque, EL vii. 7. 
multam, EL iv. 47. 
multicolore, £/. iii. 42. 
multis, I« Quint. Nov. 6l. 
multo, ^c?d El. vii. 8. 
multorum, £/. vi. 49. 
multum, EL i. 5. 2?pzf. Da* 

133, 170. 
mundi, Nat. &c. 37, 69. Ad 

Pair. 47. Jlfe/. 36, 97. 
munditieque, Ad J. Ro. 3. 
mundo, In Quint. Nov. 40. 
munera, EL v. 76. Ep. P. B. 

ii. 3. Ad Pair. 8, 113. Mmj/; 

38. Epit. Da. 134. 
munere, EL v. 6, 7. «^fl? Pair, 

58. 
muneribus, £/. v. 76. 
muniffe, Nat. &c. 17. 
munus, EL i. 91. Ad Salf. 

23. 
murmur, EL i. 90* 
murmura, Ad Leon. iii. 6. I?i 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Quint. Nov. 184, 212. Epit. 

Da. 4, 130. 
murmuraque, El. iv. 122. 
murmure, Nat. &c. 53. 
muros, EL iii. 7. In Quint. 

Nov. 176. 
Mufa, El. i. 69, v. 30, yi. 3, 

22. Ad Pair. 5. Ad Say. I, 

Man/. 8. 
Mufae, El- vii. 45. 
Mufam, Mow/. 27. 
Mufarum, ^d /. #<>• 02. 
Mufas, EL v. 41. ^<* i^r. 

56. Man/. 55. ^d /. &"• 

31. 

mufcarum, Irc Qmm*. Nov. 173. 
mufco, Epit. Da. 7 U . 
JHufis, £/. i. 25, ii. 18, iv. 51. 

EjuY. Da. 126. 
mufta, El.Vu 12. 
mutata, Ep. P. B.iv.3. JEp**. 

Do. 170. 
mutavit, ^d ieon. m. o. 
mutua, In Quint. Nov. 14. 
mutum, El. iii. 26. 
inutus, Ad Leon. i. 10. 
Mycalen, Man/. 22. 
Myrmidonum, £/. iv. 28. 
myrti, Man/. 92. 
myrteti, Epit. Da. 66 
reyrtos, Epit. Da. 131. 



N. 

nablia, El. iii. 65. 

na&us, Epit. Da. 73. Ad J. 

Ro. 69. 

ngenia, El. ii. 24. 
Naiade, El. vii. 24. 
Narcifius, Nat. &c. 6l. 
nafcentem, Man/. 71. 
Nafo, £/• vi. 19- I» ^ ™ 

£/. 18. 
nafum, El. i. 34. 
■avita, £*. v. 115. 



nata, El. iii. 48. In Ob. Pr. 

E/. 34. In Quint. Nov. 

95. 
Natalibus, El. vi. 87. 
natat, In Quint. Nov. 95. 
nate, El. iii. 63, 64, 96. In 

Quint. Nov. 92. 
nati, In Quint. Nov. 60. Nat. 

&c. 25. 
nato, Ad Patr. 97, 98. 
natura, In Quint. Nov. 158. 

Nat. &c. 9. De Id. P/. 13. 
natus, Man/. 22. 
Neapoli, Ad Leon. iii. 1. 
necdum, El. iv. 37- 
necem, El. iv. 108. I» Ob. Pr, 

El. 24 
neci,' JEUv. 16. In Ob. Pr. El. 

24. 
necis, El. vii. 38. 
ne&are, El. i. 58. 
neftens, Man/. 91, 92. 
nedum, -<4d Patr. 10. 
nefas, .JVa*. &c. 17. 
nefandos, Ad J. Ro. 29. 
negantia, El. i. 13. 
negas, In Quint. Nov. 107. 
negavit, In Quint. Nov. 158. 
neget, In Mor. 2. 
negle&o, £pjV. Da. 65. 
nemoris, Ad Patr. 16. 
nemorum, De Id. PI. 1. 
nemorumque, Epit. Da. 6. 
nemus, El. iv. 26. £j"*. D«« 

130, 176. 
Neobulen, /« Ob. Pr. El. 22. 
nepos, Man/. 72. 
nepotes, /» 06. Pr. El. 4. ^(* 

JT. Ro. 81. 
Neptunia, /« Qwwtf. -Nov. 27. 
Neptuno, J» 06. Pr. El. 10. 
nequid, I» Quint. Nov. 12$. ^ 
nequit, El. iii. 38, iv. 58, vii, 

35. 
nequitiae, Add. El. vii. 2. 
Nereus, JVtf*. &c 27% 
nervis, Eh v, 99. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



nefcio, EL vji. 100, Epit. X>a. 

155, 
nefcis, El, vii. 31. 
nefcit, EL i. 36. 
Neffi, In Ob. Pr 9 11. 
neve, £/. i. 24, iv. 70, v, 40, 

yii. 60, 86. 
ni, 4<* P^r. 9?- 
nidantibus, In Quint. Nov. 22. 
nidum, Ad Salf, 10. 
niger, In Quint. Nov. 78. 
nigra, EL ii. 22. 4d Pair. 118. 

Maw/. 62. 
nigri, In Quint. Nov. 135. 
nigro, EL vi. 75. 
nihil, ^Zd Pair. 18, 108. 
nil, £/. iv. 3, 4. ^Zd Pafr. 19. 

Ep#, Da. 91, 92, 154. 
nimbifer, In Quint. Nov. 50. 
nimbos, EL v. 136. 
nimii, Ad J. Ro. 6. 
nimis, EL ii. 18. 
nimium, EL i. 75. 4c? &*£/*• 

38, 
Ninon, EL i. 66. 
nifi, EL vi. 21. % P. B. iii. 

8. ^ Patr. 14. £p#. P«. 

27, 147. 
nitens, EL vi. 65. Ad J. Rot3. 
nitentes, Irc Ob. Pr. EL 62. 
nitido, EL iii. 54. 
nitidum, £p#. Da. 215. 
•nitor, .4 a 7 C^r. 5. 
nitrati, Z« Quint. Nov. 120. 
nituit, -E/. iii. 42. 
nivofam, Epit. Da. 114. 
nobile, Man/. 60. 
nobileque, £/. iii. 29. 
nobilioris, Ad J. Ro. 55. 
nobilis, EL i. 45, 50. 
nocenda, In Ob. Pr. EL 29* 
nocere, EL vii. 34. 
node, EL iv. 10, 114, v. 39, 

43. In Quint. Nov. 22. 

Men/. 37. 
fiodem, EL vii. 15. Nat, &c. 

3, Epit, Da. 8. 



nodes, EL v. 13$, J» QmnU 

Nov. 76. 
no&is, £/. v. 33. In Ob. Pr. EL 

32. Man/, 31. 
nodurno, EL v, 115. 
nodurnos, Iw Quint. Nov, 138. 
nomen, £/, i. 19, iv. 15. In 

Quint. Nov. 27- In Ob. Pr. 

EL 14. Ad Patr. 120. Man/. 

50. 
nomenque, J» Salm. 7* 
nomina, Man/. 7. Epit. Da, 

136, Ad J. Ro. 70. 
nomine, De Id. PL 32. Man/. 

24. £p#. Da. 21,210. 
nominis, -4c? Pttfr. 60. 
nondum, In Ob. Pr. EL 2. Ad 

Patr. 42. 
nonne, El. iii. 17. 
noram, El. vii. 1. 
n6rint, £piY. Da. 211. 
norit, iWa«/. 79- 
nofcere, El. vi. 80. 
n.6fle, Ad Patr. 89. 
nota, ^4c? Patr. 43. £?**. Z)*. 

53. 
notabam, El. vii. 6l. 
not&rat, Epit. Da. 75. 
noti, £/wY. Da. 138. 
nova, I'm Qwi?tf. Nov. 102. 4i 

J. Ho. 43. 
novam, Im 06. Pr. EL 6l. 
novellis, £/. v. 25. 
Novembris, In Quint. Nov. 

225. 
noveni, El. vi. 18. De Id. PL 2, 
novimus, Ad Patr. 7. 
novis, £/. v. 99. Epit. Da. 157. 
novo, EL iv. 34. 35. v. 100. In 

Quint. Nov. 5. Man/. 69. 
novos, EL i. 35. v. 2. 
novum, El. hi. 6l. 
novus, Ad Patr. S3. 
nox, In Quint. Nov. 69. 
noxamque, El. iv. 59. 
noxas, Ad J. Ro. 27. 
noxque, EL iii. 36. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



nube, Ad Fatr. go. Epit. Da. 

191- 

nubes, El. iv. 16. In Quint, 

Nov. 48. 209. 
nubila, Epit. Da. 84. 
nucibus, Epit. Da. 48. 
nuda, El. i. 13. Man/. 48. 
nudaque, ^4f/ Pctfr. 91. 
nuditatem, 7/i aSa/w?. 4. 
nulla, P/. iv. 110. Irc Quint. 

Nov. 226. Epit. Da. 213. 
nullis, P/. iv. 10$. 
nullo, El. iii. 1. 
nulloque, In Quint. Nov. 152. 

Nat. &c. 6. 
huIIus, P/. vii. 91. 
num, iVctf. &c. 12. 
Nnma, ^ Sfljf. 34. 
numen, P/. vii. 4. Ep. P. B. 

ii. 3. 
numenque, In Ob. Pro. 21. 
numerabant, Epit. Da. 10. 
numerabere, El. vii. 29. 
numeravimus, AdPatr. 13. 
numerique, ^/d Pfitfr. 51. 
numero, Epit. Da. 22. 
numeroque, Ad J. Ro. 48. 
numeros, El. vi. 23, 50. ^g? 

Fatr. 58. 
numero fo, In Quint. Nov. 108. 
numina, El. v. 132, 133. In 

Quint. Nov. 130. hi Ob. Pr. 

El. 29. Ad Fatr. 48. JE/wY. 

Da. 19. 
numine, £7. vi. 36\ 
numinis, De Id. PL 2. 
nummi, Ad Pair. 70. 
numquid, Epit. Da. 147. 
nunc, El.v. 37,97, 113, 119- 

vi. 37, 57, 58. vii. 28, 69. 

Apol. 12. In Ob. Pro. 31. In 

Quint. Nov. 141, 193. Ad 

Fatr. 1, 36, 93. Epit. Da. 

143, 144. Ad J. Ro. 78. 
nuncia, El. i. 2. 
nunquam, El. i. 20. JEJpjf. Da. 

196. 



nuntia, P/. iv. 71, 93. J/i (?3» 
P/\ P/. 8. 

nuntius, El. ii. 12. 

nuntii, Ad J. Ro. 37. 

nuper, Ep. P. P. i. 1. In Quint. 

Nov. 105. 7« 06. Pr. El. 4, 

Man/*. 28. 
nurus, El. i. 68. 
nutantia, In Quint. Nov. 187. 
nutat, Manf. 66. 
nymph a, El. v. 128. 
nymphae, El. i. 67. Epit. Da. 

53, 82. 
nymphas, El. vii. 23. 
nymphis, P/. iv. 7. 



oberrat, P/. v. 9. vii. 71, 
oberro, Epit. Da. 58. 
obitque, Nat. &c. 49- 
obliquo, Epit. Da. 80. 
oblita, Ad Fatr. 4. JEpiY. Da* 

1, 170. 
oblite, Jw Quint. Nov. $3. 
obliviofas, De Id. PL 20. 
objecit, El. vii. 65. Epit. Da. 

103. 
obfeuris, Epit. Da. 22. 
obfcuros, Ad Pair. 103. 
obfecrante, ^rf J. Ro. 16. 
obfeffum, ,4d Salf. 38. 
obfita, IVtfi. &c. 8. 
obfitus, P/. iv. 107- 
obftet, EL iv. 3. 
obftitit, In Quint. Nov. 221. 
obtigit, Ad Leon. i. 2. 
obvia, EL vii. 59- 
obvius, JVfl*. &c. 20. 
occidua, P/. i. 3. 
occiduis, J« Quint. Nov. 157 • 
occifo, EL iv. 15. 
occifum, In 0b. Pr. 14. 
occultique, In Quint, Nov. 6* 
occultam, El. vi. 78. 
occurrit, In Quint. Nov, %%6. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



^ceani, Nat. &c. 58. Manf 

33. 
ocellis, In Quint. Nov. 145. 

Manf. 87. 
<ocellos, In Quint. Nov. 77. 

Epit. Da. 122. 
ocius, El. v. 54. 
oculi, J« Quint. Nov. 38. 
oculique, £pi£. Da. 84. 
oculis, El. vii. 7^« In Quint. 

Nov. 71. 
oculos, EL iii. 35, iv. 49, v. 9, 
20, vi. 47, vii. 60. ^o* Pa^r. 
104. 
cdiffe, Ad Patr, 77, 78. 
-odium, In Quint. Nov. 13. 
odora, El. v. 108. 
t>do ratis, Nat. &c. 45. 
odoratos, £/. vi. 44. 
odorem, Nat. &c. 6l. 
odoriferas, El. iii. 47. 
odoriferum, Epit. Da. 185. 
Odryfios, EL iv. 78. 
Oedipodiniam, iVa^. &c. 3. 
Oeta, Jfo 05. Pr. 12. 
officia, Jlfog/: 18. 
officio, EL ii. 4, vii. 94. 
officium, EL iv. 60, v. 48. 
Ogygiiimque, El. vi. 68. 
olentia, In Quint. Nov. 35. 
olim, EL i. 63, iii. 14, iv. 97- 
Add. El. vii. 1. I» 06. Pr. 
EL 49. jVW. &c. 39, 68. 
y4a\ J. Ho. 5. 
oliva, £/. iv. 79- 
«3ivifer&, In Quint. Nov. 15. 
olli, In Quint. Nov. 182. 
Olympi, I» Ob. Pr. EL 63. 
Olyrapius, Nat. &c. 21. 
Olympo, £/. v. 19, 79, U7, 
vii. 21. /« Qwiwi. iVVc'. 8. 
Nat. kc. 46. Maw/. 100. 
Olympum, Ad Pair. 30. 
Olympus, Epit. Da. 190. 
omne, £/. iv. 58, v. 26. In 
Sahn. 8. Epit. Da. 25, 176. 
•mn«R),.I» Qwi/tf, iVov. 21 9, 



omnes, £/»V. Da. 95, 177. 
omnia, El. iii. 39. i«. Quint. 
Nov. 224. JEpz'f. Da. 171, 
172. 
omnibus, EL v. 3. 
omniferas, £/. v. 58. 
omniparum, Nat. &c. 10. 
omnis, EL vii. 100. 
omnipotens, JVa£. &c. 33. 
onagri, EjmY. Da. 98. 
onus, EL vii. 68. Ad Patr. 

40. 
opacse, £/. v. 33. 
ope, EL i. 88, v. 48. Ep. P. B. 

ii. 6. 
opem, £/. iv. 86, vii. 46. 
operata, Manf. 42. Epit. Da. 

126. 
operifque, In Quint. Nov. 164. 
operofa, Ad J. Ro. 3. 
operofo, Manf, ]6. 
operum, -<4d /. Ro. 54. 
opes, £/. iii. 41, 47, iv. 36, v« 

78. Ad Patr. 93. 
opibufque, In Quint. Nov. 31. 
Opim, EL v. 62. 
oportet, Manf. 70. 
opprimit, In Quint. Nov. 92. 
optaret, EL vii. 63. 
optat, Ad Salf. 17. ^ /. Ko. 

48. 
optatas, .EZ. vi. 4. 
optatos, £/. v. 72. 
optime, Ad Patr. 78. 
opulenta, Ad J. Ro. 58. 
opum, Ad Patr. 13. 
opus, EL iv. 40, 46, v. 8, 30. 

I« Qu*/?£. JVov. 214. Ad 

Pair. 7, 17- %'*- Da. 41, 

1S3- 
ord, JS/. i.3, 38, 11, 15, iv. 32, 

v. 84, vi. 78. Ad Chr. 4. 

!« Qiwtf. Nov. 91. Ad Patr. 

2, 80. Manf. 52. £jwf. Da. 

67. 
oras, El. iv. 11, 115, Manf 
34. Epit. Da. 113. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



©rbe, Ml. v. 9T- 

orbem, In Ob. Pr. 3. In Quint. 

Nov. 9. Nat. &c. 67. Manf. 

49. 
©rbes, Ad Pair. 35. Epit. Da. 

173, 195. 
©rbi, Ad J, Ro. 21. 
orbis, El. i. 76. In Quint. Nov. 

184. 
Orcada, El. v. 127- 
Orcades, Epit. Da. 178. 
Oreo, Epit. Da. 201. Ad Patr. 

118. Manf. 18, 
Orcum, El. vii. 83. 
ordine, Nat. &c. 35. 
•rdines, In Ob. Pr. El. 49* 

De Id. PI. 17. 
ordinibus, Ad Leon. i. 2. 
©re, £/. ii. 2, iii. 15, 54, 62, 

iv. 10, v. 21, 53, 59 f vii. 49. 

In Ob. Pr. 44. In Quint. 

Nov. 37. Ad Patr. 83. ^4d 

Sff£/: 22. Epit. Da. 207. 
©rgia, In Quint. Nov. 65. Epit. 

Da. 219. 
ori, El. vii. 69. 
origine, Ad Patr. 19* 
Orion, El. vii. 59- /» Ob. Pr. 

El. 54. ytfd Patr. 39. 
©ris, £/. iii. 49. In Quint. Nov. 

116. 
©riundus, In Ob. Pr. EL 66. 
ornare, Ad Patr. 41. 
©rnata, Ad Leon. iii. 7. 
ornavit, El. iii. 43. 
orni, Manf. 68. 
ornos, JEptf . Da. 69* 
Orphea, Ad Patr. 52. 
Orpheon, El. vi. 70. 
orta, El. v. 104. Maw/ 72. 
ortus, Ad Patr. 18. 
©fcitantia, Ad J. Ro. 38. 
©fcula, El. vii. 23. In QwVtf. 

Nov. 52. 
Ofiridem, De Id. PI. 31. 
ofia, £/. iv. 106, vi, 46. Ift 



Qw&tf, Nov* 144. ifeftm/* 

14. 
Oflae, In Quint. Not. 174. 
oftendit, De Id. PI. 28. 
oftentat, Eh v. 77, 
otia, £/. i. 18. Ad Patr. ?5< 
otiofa, De Id. PI. 4. 
otium* Ad J. R*. 28. 
oves, El. iv. 18. £jm*. Da. 117, 
ovilia, In Quint, Nov. 179. 
ovium, Epit. Da. 66. 
Oxonia, Ad J* Ro, 64. 



pabula, Epit. Da. 97. 

pace, In Quint. Nov. 15, 31. 

Manf 93. 
paciferum, El. vi. 8. 
pacificufque, In Quint. Not, 

5. 
pacla, El. vi. 82. 
Paean, Ad Salf 25. 
pagina, El. vi. 24. ^e? PafcV 

12. 
Palaeftinus, Ad Patr. 85. 
Pales, Epit. Da. 32* 
Palladi, El. ii. 18. 
Palladis, Iw Ob. Pr. 13. 
Palladium, El. ii. 2. 
Pallas, JVaf. &c. 22. 
Palladiufque, Epit. Da. 34. 
Palladio, In Ob Pr. 33. 
Palladis, De Id. PI. 11. 
pallentes, itfd Patr. 25. 
palmae, £/>&. Da. 216. 
paludes, El. i. 89. 
palus, Epit. Da. 152. 
Pan, Epit. Da. 52. 
pandens, In Quint. Nov. 133* 
pandit, £/. iii. 31, v. 58. 
Pandrafidos, Epit. Da. 163. 
pangit, Ad Patr. 26. 
panificofque, In Quint. Nvt* 

56. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



Papas, In Salm. H. 6. In 

Quint. Nov. 124. 
Papicolum, In Quint. Nov. 

222. 
Papiftarum, In Quint. Nov. 201. 
Paphia, Man/. 92. 
Paphiis, El. v. 60. 
Paphio, EL vii. 2. 
Paphon, El. i. 84. 
papyrinos, In Salm. 5. 
par, Ad Pair. 10. 
parafie, El. iv. 74. 
paratu, £/. vi. 29. 
Parca?, //« 06. Pr. 2. 
Parcam, ^o* Pa£r. 29- 
Parcarum, Man/. 19. 
parce, EL viL 93. £p. P. B. 

ii. 4. 
Parcis, £p. P. B. i. 8. 
parcius, In Ob. Pr. EL 20. 
parem, Epit. Da. 108. 
parens, El. iv. 87. .^po/. 12. 

In Ob. Pr. 18. ^ Pair. 87. 
parenti, -4d Pafr. 65. 
parentis, Ad Pair, 5, 77, 119. 

-4d /. Ho. 58. 
parere, In Ob. Pr. 1. 
paribus, Nat. &c. 50. Epit. 

Da. 98. 
parili, Maw/. 53. 
parit, EL v. 22. 
pariter, In Quint* Nov* 162, 

217, 218. Nat. &c. 45. 
Parnafii, Ad J. Ro. 66. 
Parnaffide, Man/. 92. 
Parnaflides, Ad Patr. l6. 
paro, EL i. 86. 
pars, EL iv. 19, vii. 78. Ad 

Patr. 101. 
parte, EL iv. 22, 58. E/>. P. £. 

i. 3. Irc Quint. Nov. 49. 

Marc/. 97. Epit. Da. 190. 
partes, E/. vii. 71. 
participes, In Quint. Nov. 11. 
Parthenopes, Ad Leon. iii. 2. 
Paribus, £/. vii. 36. 
partu, In Quint. Nov. 142. 



parva, EL iv. 68. ^j?of, 10. 

Man/. 90. 
parve, £/. vii- 7. «^<* /• £• 

13. 
parvum, EL i. 91. 
paruere, In Quint. Nov, 165. 
parum, In Quint. Nov. 209- 
pafcere, EL iv. 18, 37. 
pafcua, Nat. &c. 47* £/>#• 

Da. 58. 
pafleribus, EL vii. 7- 
paffer, JBpi*. Da. 101. 
pafiibus, Nat. &c. 11. 
paffus, EL iv. 70. 
pallor, JEX iv. 41, v. 113. 
paftorem, Epit. Da. 12. 
paftores, Epit. Da. 30, 126, 
paftorefque, Epit. Da. 54. 
pailoribus, Epit. Da. 7$. 
patebit, Ep. P. B. iii. 8. 
patent, EL v. 18. In Quint. 

Nov. 175. 
patentia, In Quint. Nov. 2. 
pater, EL iv. 78. In Quitit. 

Nov. 8, 221. Nat. &c. 33. 

^rfParr.6, 68,78,95, 111. 

Man/. 25. 
patet, I» Qawtf. Nov. 98. Ad 

Patr. 69* 
patitur, Man/. 37. 
patre, EL vi. 84. In Quint. 

Nov. 72. In Ob. Pr. EL 32, 

66. 
patrem, Nat. &c. 15. 
patres, In Quint. Nov. 118. 
patria, EL i. 10, iv. 87. 
patrieios, In Quint. Nov. 117. 
patrii, EL iii. 63, iv. 85. 
patriis, EL vi. 89. Epit. Da. 

170. 
patrio, Ad J. Ro. 10. 
patrios, EL i. 17, iv. 126. 
patris, EL i. 34, ii. 14. In Ob. 

Pr. EL 41. Ad J. Ro. 19. 
patrium, Ad Patr. 30. 
patronus, EL i. 31. 
patrum, El. iv. 43. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



patuere, El. iv. 62. 

patuit, Apol. 7. Ad Patr. 

79- 
patuli, In Quint, Nov. 1S4. 
pauca, Ad Salf. 6. 
paiicaque, El. i. 92. 
paulum, El. iv. 49. Epit. Da. 

148. 
Paulus, El iv. 102. 
paupere, El. vi. 83. 
Paufilipi, Ad Leon. iii. 6. 
pavidi, In Quint. Nov. 151. 
pavido, El. iv. 11 7. 
pavidos, El. iv. 63. 
pecorifque, Epit. Da. 14. 
pecorumque, In Quint. Nov. 

93. 
pe&ine, Ad J. Ro. 10. 
pe&ora, El. i. 44, iv. 65, v. 1 1 , 

vii. 45. -4o*o\ £/. vii. 8. Ad 

Patr. 1, 110. Ma?//. 48. 

Mpit. Da. 45. 
pedtore, El. iii. 31, iv. 124. In 

Ob. Pr. El. 19. Nat. &c. 3. 

Epit. Da. 107. 
pedtus, El. i. 6, iii. 29, vi. 78, 

vii. 12, 72. -fa Qwm£. IV01?. 

18. In Ob. Pr. El. 15. 
pedtvifque, Epit. Da. 193. 
peculi, Ad J. Ro. 48. 
pecus, El. iii. 26. iVaf. &c. 

46. Epit. Da. 25. 
pede, El. iv. 98. £p#. Da. 

204. AdJ.Ro. 12. 
pedem, £/. vii. 78. 
pedes, El. v. 128, vi. 8, 40. 
pedibus, In Quint. Nov. 111. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 56. 
Pegaseo, Ad J. Ro. 36. 
J>elagi, El. iv. 21. Epit. Da. 

99- 
Pelidis, In Ob. Pr. 15. 
Pelion, In Quint. Nov. 174. 
pellacefque, El. i. 6l. 
pelle, Ep. P. B. ii. 7. 
pellere, In Ob. Pr. 9. 
p«llefcit, EL vii. 23. 



peilice, El. iii. 67. i» Quint, 

Nov. 76. 
pellit, £/. vi. 42. 
pellitur, El. iv. 102. 
pellueentes, El. iii. 52. 
pellucida, El. vi. 6l. 
Pelopeia, El. i. 45. 
Pelopis, £/. i. 57. 
Pelori, Nat. &c. 56. 
penates, El. i. 17, iv. 85. 

Maw/. 54. 
pendetque, In Quint. Nov. 82. 
pendulum, In Oh. Pr. 3. 
pendulus, El. i. 76. 
pene, ^4d J. Ro. 32. 
Peneide, £/. v. 13. 
Peneidos, El. vii. 33. 
Peneium, Man/. 62. 
Penelopeia, El. iv. 56. 
penetralia, El. v. 17. 
penetralibus, Jw Qwwi. Nov, 

151. 
penetraverat, J« Qwi«f. Nov. 

219. 
penetraveris, JEp. P. B. iii. 7. 
penitus, /;» Quint. Nov. 159. 

Ad Salf. 18. 
penitufque, Epit. Da. 174. 
penna, Ad J. Ro. 46. 
pennis, El. iii. 24, 59. J» 

Quint. Nov. 45. 
penfare, £/?. P. jB. i. 4. 
Pentheo, Ad Leon. ii. 7. 
pependit, El. vii. 68. . 
pepercit, Ad Salf. 21. 
peperere, ^d Patr. 15. 
peperifle, £/. vi. 36. 
peperit, El. iv. 26. i>* Quint. 

Nov. 142. 
pepulit, I« Quint. Nov. 137- 
peradtam, Man/. 20. 
peradtis, In Quint. Nov. 68. 
pe rages, Epit. Da. 217. 
perbeata, De Id. PI. 2. 
percenfere, Ad Patr. 114# 
percipies, El. vi. 45. 
percita, In 0b. Pr. El, 30s 



VfeRBAL INDEX. 



perculfes, Nat. &c. 52. 
perculfoique, In Quint. Nov. 

125. 
percurres, Epit. Da. 150. 
perdit, Epit. Da. 78. 
perdita, Epit. Da. 89. 
perditas, Ad Leon. ii. 4. 
pereant, Epit. Da. 153. 
peregit, Nat. &c. 34. 
peregrina, El. iv. 86. 
peregrinus, Man/. 26. 
peremit, /« 06. Pr. 15. 
perenne, De Id. PL 55. 
perennes, Nat. &c. 18. Epit. 

Da. 205. 
perenni, Nat. &c. 5. 
perennis, El. v. 30. Iw 06. Pr. 

48. 
pererrans, JEjtMf. Da. 8* 
pererrat, De Id. PI. 17. 
pererrato, In Quint. Nov* 

40. 
perferre, El. i. 15. 
perfun&am, Ad J. R0.76. 
perfundit, Manf. 33. 
perge, Ad Patr. 56. 
perhibet, Manf. 40* 
periere, Apol. 12. 
perire, El. iv. 96. 
peritius, El. vii. 35. 
perituris, Nat. &c. f. 
perittfs, Ad Patr. 57. 
perlita, In Ob. Pr. 25* 
perluis, EL v. 84. 
perluftrare, In Quint. Nov* 

190. 
permeat, El. vi. 46. 
permenlas, Manf. 85. 
perofa, El. iv. 80* 
perpetui, Manf* 51. 
perpetuis, Nat. &c. 1. 
perpetuo, El. v. 1. 
perpetuoque, El. iv. 79* i» 

Q//i«£. Nov. 14-9. 
perpetuos, i4(Z P«^/\ 116. 
perpetuum, Nat. &c^ 36. 



perque, El. v. l6, 17> vi. *7> 7$* 
Perfeiae, El. vi. 73. 
perfentiat, EL iii. 17* 
Perfephone, In 0b. Pr. 37. 
perfolvi, In 0b. Pr. EL 5* 
perfohat, El. iii. 60, 
perfonet, EL ii. 24. 
pertulit, EL i. 2. 
Periianaque, ^?c? Patr. $4. 
perufta, £jo. P. B. iii. 12. 
pervelit, £/. v. 130. 
pefvenere, EL i. Ii 
perverfae, In Quint. Nov. l6S, 
pervolitaut, EL v. 120. 
peflimus, Ad Sdlf. 11. 
peftem, Ad J. Ro. 36. 
pete, EL iv. 2. 
petenda* £/. ii. 20, vii. 44. 
petis, Epit. Da. 128. 
petit, EL i. 4. J« Q*mtf* JVov e 

180. Epit. Da. 86, 105. 
Petro, In Quint. Nov. 62. 
Phaetonteo, EL v. 92, 
phalanges, Manf. 84. 
pharetra, £/. vii. 10, 18. Ad 

J. Ro. 35. 
pharetrae, Epit. Da. 391. 
pharetramque, E/. iv. 45. 
pharetrati, /« Quint. Nov. 96 . 
pharetrigero, £/. i. 82. 
Pheretiadas, Maw/. 57. 
Phlegetontius* In Quint. Nov, 

76. 
Philomela, EL v. 25* 
Phihe&mque, Ad J. Ro. 36. 
Philyreie, In Ob. Pr. 25. 
Philyreius, El. iv. £7. 
Phocarum, Epit. Da. 100,; 
Phoebadesj ^J Pain 25. 
Phoebados, £/. ii. 73i 
Phcebaeo, Ad Patr. 76. 
Phcebaaos, Manf. 78. 
Phoebaeus, EL vii. 46. 
Phcebe, EL v. 44, 56, 67, Si 4 

85, 93, 137. Nat. &c. 25, 

63. ^ 6a//. 24. 



VERBAL tNDEX. 



Phoebi, Man/, ii. 24. Ad J. Ro. 

63. 
Phoebicolis, El. i. 14. 
Phoebo, EL ii. 12. Man/. 35, 

38. 
Pboebura, El. vi. 15, 33, 45, 

vii. 33. iVaW: 38. 
Phoebus, EL iii. 34, v. 49, vii. 

66. Nat. &c. 41. ^d! iV/-. 

64". Man/. 71. 
Phoenix, JE/«7. Da. 187. 
Phoni, 7?/. Quint. Nov. 141, 

152. 
Phrica, /« Quint. Nov. 73. 
Phyllis, E/. v. 114. 
pia, 7ft Q'tfinl. iVou. 83, 223, 

Munf. 17. 
picamque, ///. Salm. II. 2. 
piceis, J» Quint. Nov. 45. 
pidta^que, £/?zY. Da. 191. 
pi&is, E/. vii. 17. 
Pieria, Ad Leon. ii. 5. 
Pierides, Manf 2. 
Pierios, ^o* Patfr. 1 . 
Pieriofque, EL iv. 31. 
pietas, Manf. 15. 
pietate, Ep. P. B. i. 4. 
pietatis, £/. iv. 17. 
pigebit, In Quint. Nov. 196. 

Epit. Da. 125. 
piger, In Quint. Nov. 97. 
pignora, EL iv. 42. 
Pindaricofque, EL vi. 23. 
pinea, EL v. 6*2. 
pingues, In Quint. Nov. 32. 
pinu, Epit. Da. 169. 
pios, EL vi. 56". 
pifcium, In Sain?. 1. 
pifcdfaeque, K/. iv. 103. 
piumque, £/?*7. Da. 33. 
pins, 7/i Q7«7t^. IVoi>. 1. In Ob. 

Pr. EL 4. 
placat, EL iv. 68, v. 115. 
placebat, El. vii. 75. 
placent, EL i. 13, vii. 52, 
placere, El. v. 64. 
placidam,£/.iv.8.^c?/.JRo.75 



placidas, Epit. Da. 72* 
placidis, EL i. 25. 
placido, El. iii. 62. 
placidufque, Epit. Da. 208. 
plaeuft, El. v. 66. Mar;?/. 59. 
plaad, De Id. PL 21. ilio///. 

36. 
plagas, El. v. 32. Ep. P. B. 

iii. 12. In Ob. Pr. El.60. 
plaudit, EL v. 69. 
plaudunt, EL iii. 59. 
plaultrum, EL v. 35. 
plaufumque, Manf. 52. 
plauius, EL i. 28. 
plebs, I/i Quint. Nov. \77- 
pledtro, Ad Pair. 33. 
pledrum, EL vi. 43. 
Pleiones, De Id. PL 27. 
plena, El. i. 70, vii. 22. 
pleno, El. vi. 1. 
plorata, Epit. Da. 2. 
plumbo, Epit. Da. 80. 
plumis, EL ii. 5. I« Quint. 

Nov. 206. 
plura, £/. iii. 2. Jrc Quint. Nov. 

204. JSpiY. Da. 101. 
plurima, £/. iii. 23. 
plufquam, EL iv. 19. 
pluvium, Epit. Da. 204*. 
pocula, El. vi. 31, 62, vii. 22. 

Epit. Da. 181. 
poenas, In Quint. Nov. 222. 
poefin, EL vi. 13. 
poetae, Manf. 73. Ad J. Ro. 6. 
poetam, Ad Leon. ii. 1. Ad 

Patr. 61. Manf 1 6. 
poetas, De Id. PI. 37. 
poetis, EL vi. 53. 
poli, Ad Chr. 2. Ad Patr. 34, 
pollenti, In Ob. Pr. 39. 
pollicitum, Ad J. Ro. 4p. 
polo, El. v. 38, 140. De Id. 

PI. 9- 
polos, Nat. &c. 68. 
polus, EL i. 56. Nat. &c. 21. 

Epit. Da. 190. 
poma, ^0/. 1. 



VERBAL INBE3C 



pompa, El. i. 27. 
Ponipeianas, El. i. 6$. 
ponar, EL vii. 92. 
pondera, Man/. 6f. 
pondere, Nat. &c, 35. 
ponderibus, Ep. P. B. iii. 10. 
pondus, El. ii» ig. 
pone, El. v. 88, 94* I« 06. Pr. 

£/. 27. 
ponens, P/. v. 47. In Quint. 

Nov. 131. 
ponere, El. vi. 86. 
ponet, In Quint. Nov. 109. 
Pontia, J# Mor. 1 . 
pontique, .4d Patr. 88. 
ponto, IVa£. &c. 28. 
pontum, EL iv. 1. In Quint. 

Nov. 108. 
poplite, In Quint. Nov. 57. 
populabitur, Nat. &c. 67. 
populatur, PZ. iv. J5. 
populeumque, Epit. Da. 130. 
populi, Ad Chr. 6". Jra Quint. 

Nov. 169, 220. ./4d J". Ho. 

populo, ^d Patr. 103. 
populos, /« Quint. Nov. 2, 23. 
populoi'que, Jw Ob. Pr. EL 10. 
populum, In Quint. Nov. 34. 
porrigit, EL vii. 46. 
portas, Jw Quint. Nov. 133. 
portat, I/* Quint. Nov. 56. 
portitore, De Id. PL 24. 
Portumni, Ad Salf. 41. 
pofcere, In Quint. Nov. 29* 
polcit, EL v. 8, 72. 
pofcunt, Ad Patr. 78. 
pofita, EL i. 30. In Quint. 

Nov. 172. 
pofiti, Ad Patr. 47. 
poffe, P/. i. 72, ii. 8. iv. 126, v. 
■ 64. Ad Leon. i. 8. Ad Patr. 

112. Ad J. Ro. 44. 
poffem, ApoL 11. JSpzf. Da. 

118, 119. 
poffint, In 0b. Pr. 18. Ad 

Pair. 9, 



poffit, EL i. 54, vii. 28. hi 

Quint. Nov. 100, 101 . 
poiTant, In Quint. Nov. 43. 

Ad Patr. 8. 
poft, EL iv. 94, vi. 67, vii. 36. 

In Quint, Nov. 11, 210. 

Man/. 4. PpzY. Da. 31, 207. 
pofteritas, Ad J. P.O. 86. 
pofthabita, Ad J. Ro. 65. 
pofthabitura, EL i. 84. 
poithaec,. EL vii. 101. 
poftquam^ Ad Patr, 111. IZpiV. 

-Dfl. 20, 154. Ad J. Ro. 08. 
pofui, EL iii. 35. Add. EL 

vii. 2 
potat, Epit. Da. 206. 
patens. El. vii. 96. 
potentem, j» 06. Pr. EL 17 , 
potentior, In Quint. Nov. 42. 
potentique, In Ob. Pr. 19. 
poteras, Ad Leon. ii. 10. 
poteris, EL iv. 9. J» Quint 9 

Nov. 119. 
poterit, £//. P. P. ii. 3. Man/. 

73. 
poterunt, EL viii. 45. 
potes, EL vi. 2. Man/. 19. 
poteftas, P/. iii. 27. 
poteftis, Ad Patr. 108. 
potiora, Ad Patr. 97. 
potius, Ep. P. B. ii. 7* 
potor, EL vi. 71. Epit. Da. 

175. 
potuere, PpzY. Da. 158. 
pouri, £7. vii. 60. 
potuitne, Nat. &c. l6. 
potum, EL vi. 85. 
prsebeat, EL vi. 60. 
prasbet, P/. v. 74. 
prasbuit, Ad Leon. ii. 6. 
praecipitaris, P/. v. 80. 
prsecipitata, EL vii. 82. 
prascipiteique, In Quint. Nov* 

70. 
praecipiti, Nat. &c. 26. 
praecipue, I. iii. 13. 
praeeonem, El. ii. 3. 

• d 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



praeconum, EL ii. 3. 
praecordiifque, Ad Salf. 20. 
praecordia, Epit. Da. 80. 
praecurfant, In Quint. Nov. 46. 
pra?dam, In Quint. Nov. 21. 
praedatorque, In Quint. Nov. 

79- 

prasdatur, El. v. 127. 
praeeunt, In Quint. Nov. 57* 
praeferentes, In Sahn. 6. 
prsefuit, Ad J. Ro. b6. 
praelarga; EL iv. 43. 
praelia, EL iv. 51. 
pra3mia, Man/. £4. Epit. Da. 

36. 
praemifib, In Quint, Nov. 

200. 
praeoptas, Ad Patr. 94. 
proepes, De Id. PL 28. 
praeponere, EL v. 131. 
praepofuiffe, EL vi. 16. 
prasreptum, Epit. Da. 7. 
praefentem, Ad Leon. i. 4. 
praefentia, Epit. Da. 146. 
praefepibus, Epit. Da. 42. 
praefes, In Ob. Pr. 41. 
prcefides, De Id. PL 1. 
praefidet, Ad J. Ro. 53. 
praeful, EL iii. 13, 53, iv. 18. 
prafulis, In Ob. Pr. EL 6. 
praetereuntis, EL iii. 22. 
praeteriiiTe, El. i, 52. 
praetervolavi, In Ob. Pr. El. 

55. 
praetulit, Ad Salf. 8. 
praeunti, EL iv. 2.9. 
praeverte, EL iv. 39* 
praeverte re, In Quint. Nov. 

209. 
prata, Ad Salf. 32. Epit. Da. 

pravo, Add. El. vii. 4. Ad J. 

Ro. 80. 
prece, Ad J. Ro. 69. 
preces, El. iv. 66, v. 68, vii. 

90. 
I rtcor, EL iv. 3, v. 134. Ep % 



P. B. ii. 4. In 0b. Pr. 41. 

Ad Patr. 56. 
prefia, EL vi. 89. 
preffit, El. iv. 98. 
pretium, £/. v. 75. 
pridem, Maul. 6. 
prima, £/. i. 24, 71, vi. 88. 

Nat. &c. 37. 
prim am, EL vii. 14. 
primatum, In Saint. II. 6. 
primd, El. v. 42. In Quint. 

Nov. 211. 
primus, El. iv. 29, vii. 92. 

De Id. PL 7, 36V 
principium, El. vii. 62. 
priores, Adj. Ro. 27- 
prifca, El. iv. 16. 
prifcamque, Epit. Da. 33. 
prifcique, In Qui?it. Nov. 50. 
prifciimque, De Id. Pl.31. Epit. 

Da. 164. 
priicus, Nat. &c. 6l. 
prifrinam, Ad J. Ro. 26. 
prius, Epit. Da. 6*3. 
pro, £/. vi. 5.9. 
probrofse, 2/j Quint. Nov. 

104. 
procaces, J» Quint. Nov. 99. 
procacibu-s, Epit. Da. 63. 
procax, Ad J. Ro. 79- 
procerum, EL iii. 5. In Quint, 

Nov. 117. 
procubuifie, El. v. 50. 
procul, EL i. 87, vii. 67 '. In 

Quint. Nov. 67. De Id. PL 

3. Ad Patr. 74, 105. Epit. 

Da. 25, 10'9, 203. Ad J. 

Ro. 36. 
procus, El. i. 30. 
prodidit, El. vii. IS. 
prodigus, EL i. 29. 
proditionis, In Quint. Nov. 

214. 
Prodotseque, In Quint. Nov*. 

141. 
Prodotes, In Quint. Nov 152. 
producit, In Quint. Nov. 76. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



produ&as, EL v. 139. 
profana, Ep. P. B. ii. 8. 
profanis, i;t Quint. Nov. 111.. 
profanos, Ad Pair. 104. 
profecere, 7i/j*r. Da. 154. 
Profuerint, £/. v. 24. 
Profugam, £/. vi. 69. 
Proiugi, El. i. 19. 
Profunda, EL vi. 58. Ad Salf. 

19. 
profundarn, De Id. PL 25. 

<4rf /. lio. 44. 
profundis, JW. &c. 2. 
profundo, //* Qz/z/i^. JVbtf. 103. 
profrjudos, Ad Pair. 22. 
prognatam, In Quint. Nov. 

72. 
progredior, EL vii. 77. 
proh, In Ob. Pr. EL 7. 
prole&at, EL vi. 3. 
proles, EL iii. 41, vi. 81. In 

Quint.' Nov. 27. -^a/. &c. 

23. De Id. PL 12. 
prolixus, Man/. 11. 
Promethean, ^</ Pair. 20. 
pro mill a, I« Quint. Nov. 

81. 
pfomptior, JB/. vii, 12. 
pronepos, EL iv. 24. 
pronior, Ad Patr. 6 l J. 
prono, EL i. 4. 
pronos, JE/. iv. 64. itp#. .Dtf. 

.196*. 
pronus, Nat. &c. 27. 
propago, In Quint. Nov. lG2. 
prope, EL vi. 61. £/>. P, f?. 

iii. 2. ^d Pafr. 62. Man/. 

62. 
properant, Maw/". 68. 
propofiti, In Quint. Nov. 123. 
proprias, Apol. 4. 
propter, Ad Leon. ii. 4. 
Proferpina, In Ob. Pr. 46. 
profpiciens, EL iv. 92. 
Proteos, £/. iii. 26. 
Proteus, Epit. Da. 99. 
protiiius, El. iii. 3, vii. 73. 



4>o/. 6. Jn Ob. Pr. El. l6, 

/« Quint. Nov. 1 22. 
providos, EL ii. 59- 
proxima, £/ vii. 62. 
prudens, In Quint. Nov. 158. 
pruinofas*, In Quint. Nov. 48. 
pfallit, El. vi. 43. 
publica, Nat. &c. 9. Ad Patr. 

98. 
pudet, £/. iv. 60. 
pudica, £/. v. 102. 
pudor, Epit. Da. 212. 
puduit, EL vi. 15. 
puella, £/. v. 43, 110. In 

Quint. Nov. 105. 
puella;, EL i. 65, 79- In Quii.t. 

Nov. 217. Mcmf. 45. 
puellares, £/. vi. 47. 
puer, JE/. i. 41. iv. 12, vii. 5. 

-rfrfrf EL vii. 9. I» 06. Pr. 

28. 2S T <tf. &c. 62. 
pueri, EL i. 85. 
puerilia, EL vii. 3. 
puero, £/. vii. 20, 50. 
puerque, Ad Patr. 66. 
pugil, El. iv. 112. 
pugiles, In Quint. Nov. 155. 
pugnent, El. vii. 94. 
pulcher, Epit. Da. 70. 
pulchrae, £/. iii. 20. 
pullis, EL ii. 21. 
pulmonis, Ad Salf. 12. 
pulia, EL iii. 66. 
puliat, EL iv. 88. 
pulfavitque, £/. iii. 7- 
pulvere, £/. vi. 26. In Quint. 

Nov. 161. 
pulvereum, EL iv. 120. 
pulveris, Ep. P. B. ii. 6. J» 

Quint. Nov. 120. 
punicea, £/. iii. 39. 
puniceum, £/. v. 108. 
puppe, In Ob. Pr. 35? 
puppes, Epit. Da. 102. 
pura, El. iii. 60. Man/. g6. 
purae, In Quint. Nov. |6\ 
purgatoreu), .£/?. P. B. iii. 1. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



puris, Man/, 32. 
puro, El. i. 58, vi. 62. 
purpura, EL i. 62. 
purpurea, EL vi. 52.. 
purpureo, Manf. 99. 
Purpureoque, Z« 0£. Pr. 44. 
purpereus, £pj£, X)a. 2 12. 
Purum, Epit. Da. 203. 
purus, Epit, Da. 204. 
'puta, Ad Patr. 57. 
putares, El. vii. 25, 
Putas, El. vi. 80. 
Putet. El. v. 8. Epit.Da.l9l. 
Puto, £ptf. Da. 133. 
Pyrenum, El. v. 3 0. 
pyrops, £pi*. Da. 192. 
pyrum, #/«Y. Da. 48. 
Pythoiie, EL vii. 31. Ad Salf. 
25. 



Q. 

qua, EL i. 4, v. 138, vii, 51. 

hi Quint. Nov. 46. Ad Pair. 

69. Man/. 19,32,36. Epit. 

Da. 110, 130. Ad J. Ro. 

41. 
quacunque, Manf. 49. 
quadrinroque, £/. vi. 27» 
quacunque, El. i. 64. 
quselibet, In Quint. Nov. 115. 

De Id. PL 13. 
quseque, El. vi. 58, 102, 123, 

vi. 24. De Id. PL 3. Ad 

Patr. 85. 
quaerant, EL iv. 91. 
quaerebant, £/. vii. 15. 
quoerit, El. v. 71. 
quaefitum, y/a' Paj'r. 49. 
quaefivifle, jjjpaf. Da. 201. 
quaeftorque, ^e/ J. llo. 55. 
quale, El. vi. 4^. 
qualem, £/»£. Da. 116. 
|iialia, 2» Qi/m^. Nov, 06, 



qualis, EL iv. 27, vi. 65. 

Nat. &c. 23. 
qualiter, Ep. P. B. i. 7. /» 

Quint. Nov. 6'4, 178. 
quam, £/. i. 9, 14, 86, ii. 4, 

iv, 23, 40, 48, 55, 85, vi. 

5, 9. £;>• P. £• iii. 9. I» 

Qwi/tf. JVoi\ 174. i\ 7 a^. &c. 

41. Ad Patr 83. ^/d Salf. 

4. £#i* Da. 63, 94. Ad J. 

R,o. 56, 84. 
quamlibet, El. iii. 24. 
quamquam, Epit. Da. 123. 
qu Unique, EL iv. 25. .^d Salf. 

8. 
quamvis, £7. iv. 53, 107- Ad 

Patr. 9, 97. Epit. Da. \\6. 
quandoque, EL iv. 125. Nat. 

&c. 19. 
quandoquidem, Manf. 3. 
quanto, Ad Leon. ii. 3. ^0/. 9. 
quantum, EL vi. 42. Manf. 

98. 
quantus, £/;*£. Da. 129. 
quaque, EL v. 89. 
quafcunqne, El v. 77, vii. 71. 
quafque, Epit. Da. 152. 
quaffat, EL i. 38. 
quatiens, £/. vii. 47. 
quatit, EL iv. 120. 
queant, In 0b. Pr. 21. 
queas, El. vi. 6. 
queat, In Ob. Pr. El. 65. Ad 

Patr. 11. 
queis, EL iv. 11. In Quint* 

Nov. 183. 
quemlibet, EL vi. 50. 
quemque, Ep. P. B. ii. f)„ 
quercubup, Ad Patr. 53. 
quercus, EL iii. 21. 
querebar, El. iii. 15. 
querebunda, EL ii. 23. 
querebundus, EL vii. 77> 
querela?, Ad Pair. 105. 
querelis, Epit. Da. 5. 
quereris, EL vi. 13. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



queritur, Epit. Da. 7 < Ad J. 

Ro. 49. 
quicquarn, EL i. 23. In Quint. 

Nov. 43. 
quicquid, El. i. 76, vii. 20. In 

Salm. 1. Ad Pair. 86, 88. 

£p#. Da. 27. ^ J. lio. 

74, 
quicum, Epit. Da. 101. 
quicunque, Epit. Da. 208. 
quid, El. i. 36, iii. 28, iv. 57, 

v. 19, 21, 22, 50, 57, 83, 

84, 136, vi. 3, 13, 21, vii. 

9, 28, 85. Ad Leon. i. 3, iii. 

1. iw Q?/ivtf. JVofl. 100, 101. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 29. Ad Patr. 

50, 6l. Epit. Da. 33, 37, 

77, 82, 83, 92, 147, 155, 

171. ^d J. ilo. 86. 
quie.s, El. iii. 66." 
quiefcam, Man/. 93. 
quiefcant, Z/z Ob. Pr. 42. 
quietem, ^frf Leon. ii. 11. 
quin, £/. ii. 19. Man/. 34. 

£^zY. Da. 136, 207. ^ /. 

Ro. 37. 
quintoque, Jw Qwmf Nov. 

225. 
quique, £/. iv. £}3. 
Quirini, In Quint. Nov. 53. 
Quirites, El. vii. 51. 
quis, EL v. 8. Jw Salm. H. 1. 

/rc 06. Pr. El. 65. -De !</. 

PL 7. £pif. -Da. 37, 43, 45, 

55 7 113. -4rf/. Ro. 13, 25, 

41. 
quifquam, Epit. Da. Q6. 
quii'quamne, In Quint. Nov. 

123. 
quo. El. vii. 58. Ep. P. B. 

m. 2. In Quint. Nov. 195. 

^Man/. 96. Epit. Da. 11. ^ 

J.Ro.79- 
quod, £7. iii. 17, IS, iv. 58, 
123, v. 23, 75. In Salm. H. 
5. Ad Patr. 13. Ad Sal/. 21. 
jEpzY. Pa. 13, 144, 



quodque, EL i. 7, iii. 19. 7/j 

Q*«W. Nov. 33. 
quol'cunque, i/j Quint. Nov. 16, 

122. 
quot, £/. i. 66j 79, iii. 26. £/?. 

P. B. ii. 8. 
quoties, El. i. 53^ 55, v. 79> 

vii. 33. 3/ay//:' 44. Epit. 

Da. 142. 
quotque, i?i Quint. Nov. 130. 
quotquot, is/, i. 56. In Quint. 

Nov. 163. 



R. 

rabies, El. v. 23. 
racemiferis, El, iii. 51. 
racemiferumque, EL vi. 21, 
racemo, Epit. Da. 65. 
racliabant, EL iii, 39* 
radians, EL vii. 13. 
radiant, EL i. 80. 
radiante, EL iv. 11. 
radianti, In Quint. Nov. 190. 
radiata, Ad Patr. 100. 
radios, £/. v. 47. 
ramoise, Epit. Da. 59» 
rapere, Man/. 18. 
rapias, EL ii. 19. 
rapiat, J« Quint. Nov. 20. 
rapido, JEjt)/£« Da. 40. 
rapidos, £/. v. 137 . Ad Patr. 

35. 
rapient Ad J. Ro. 118. 
rapietque, Nat. &'c. 15. 
rapis, -^d Patr. 71. 
rapit, £/. ii. 4, iv. 64. 
rapiunt, £/. i. 26. 
rapta, El. vi. 67. 
raptantur, In Quijit. Nov. 222. 
raptaque, El. vii. 80. 
raptat, In 0b. Pr. EL 42. Nat. 

&c. 38. 
raptatur, El. v. 15. 
raptos, £/. iii. 11. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



j-aptus, Ep. P.B.I. In Ob. Pr. 

El. 49. 
rapuerunt, Epit. Da. 20. 
rara, EL v. 38. 
rafo, In Quint. Nov. 83. 
ratas, De Id. PL 5. 
rauc?e, EL i. 90. 
rauci, Ad Leon. iii. 6. 
rebellis, In Quint. Nov. 41. 
rebus, Ad J. Ro. 83. 
recepit, EL iv. 55. 
receffit, EL v. 39. 
recetfus, EL iv. 29. Irc Ob. Pr, 

36. Epit. Da. 6. 
recipit, EL v. §2. 
recitem, £/. vi. 90. 
reconditas ; Jw 06. Pr. £/. 37- 
re&6rque, In Quint. Nov. 78. 
recubamus, Epit. Da. 148. 
recubans, EL v. 41. 
recumbis, De Id. PL 4. 
recuib, £/. i. 19. 
redamemque, EL vi. 5. 
reddiderant, /« Quint. Nov. 

54. 
reddimus, I» Quint. Nov. 19S. 
reddita, £/. v. 24. 
redditur, Ad Pair. 11. 
redditus. Ad Salf. 31. 
redeunt, £/. v. 5. 
redeunte, ^4e? J. Ro. 23. 
redeuntem, £/>>z7. Da. 75. 
redeunti, In Quint. Nov. 134. 
rediere, El. v. 29. 
redimita, El. v. 65. 
redimitus, ^ Pa//*. 45. 
redis, £/. v. 136. 
reditque, EL vii. 51. 
reditura, £/. vii. 76". 
rediviva, EL v. 55. 
redolet, EL v. 108, vi. 24. 
refer, Ad Salf. 7. 
referam, Epit. Da. 160. 
referant, EL v. 135. 
referet, Epit. Da. 56. 
jreferre, £/. iii. 38, vii. 78. 
refers. £/, vi. 11. 



refert, EL iv. 71, vi. 55. 

reflua, EL i. 9. 

refovenda, EL iii. 35. 

refugam, EL vi. 13, vii. 15. 

refulferit, In Salm. B. 5. 

regi, EL iv. 28. 

regiam, In Ob. Pr. EL 63. 

regibus, Ad Chr. 8. 

regiua, EL ii. 17, vii. 64. Ad 

Chr. 1. 
regis, £/. iii. 50, jv. 99. />* 

Salm. H. 4. Mqnf. 5$. 
regales, Ad Pair. 41. 
regat, £/. vi. 40. 
rege, El. iv. 11 7. 
regem, Ep. P. B i. 1. 
reges, Z» Quint. Nov. 57, 112. 

^ &*//*. 38. Man/. 80. 
regna, £/. iv. 8, vi. 58, 84. In 
Quint. Nw. 2. In Ob. P>\ 
EL 43. Nat. kc. 48. Ad 
Pair. 94. Ad Salf. 41. 
regnans, i/J Quint. Nov. 7. 
regnante, J« Quint. Nov. 105. 
regnaque, //? Quint. Nov. 15. 
regni, £/. iii. 62. /w Quint. 

Nov. 11. 
regnum, 7« Quint. Nov. 132. 

£/?&. Dtf. 16*3. 
regum, In Quint. Nov. 74. 
relatis, In Quint. Nov. 2l6. 
relegatas, /id J. Ro. 31. 
relicti, Epit. Pa. 14. 
reltgionis, £/. iv. 46. 
relinquam, iWfftf/. 86. 
reliquis, Ad J. Ro. 14. 
reliqmt, El. i. 41. ifl Quint. 
Nov. 69, 210. De Irf. PL 
34. A/a*/! 14. £pz7. Da. 
117- 
relligione, £^7. P. B. iii. 6. 
relliquias, //* Quint. Nov. 110, 
remanet, £/. vii. 79' 
remeare, EL i. 89. 
remigat, In Quint. Nov, 20S. 
retnoretur, EL iv. 4. 
remota, De id. P/. 21. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



remotas, EL i. 5. 
remotis, EL iy. 91. 
renes, Ad Salf. 19. 
reor, Ad Patr. 6S. 
reparat, EL v. 103. 
reparata, EL v. 3. 
rependere, Ad Patr. 112. 
repentinus, EL vi. 46. 
repetitaque, Ad Patr. 113. 
repetunt, Epit. Da. 53. 
reponere, Ad Patr. 114. 
reponi, Ad J. Ro. 53. 
reptantefque, Ad Patr. 48. 
requiem, Ad J. Ro. 76. 
rerum, Nat. &c. p, 34, 66. 
res, EL iv. 40. 

referata, In Quint. Nov. 98. 
refpexit, EL vii. 83. 
refpicit, £/?#. Da. 189* 
rei'pondere, Jd Pa/r. 9, 10. 
refponfat, In Quint. Nov. 67. 
refumit, El. v. 45. 
retardat, Epit. Da. 147. 
retegunt, Ad Patr. 24. 
retia, EL i. 60. In Quint. Nov. 

115. Epit. Da. 143. 
retinens, Ad Patr. 20. 
retinebat, Epit. Da. 13. 
retineret, £/. v. 44. 
rettulit, EL ii. 16. Man/. 

23. 
reverentior, /4d Chr. 7. 
revin&us, £/. v. 121. 
revifens, Epit. Da. 102. 
revifere, EL i. 11. 
revocabis, De Id. PL 38. 
revocaret, £/. ii. 9^ 
revocat, £/. v. 2. 
revocent, £/. vi. 42. 
revocet, Ad J. Ro. 30» 
revolubile, EL v. 1. 
rex, El. v. 75. J« Quint. Nov. 

116, 162. InOb.Pr. EL 13. 
JVaf. &c. 57. 

ri&us, £/. iy. 63. .4d Pafr. 

107. 
ridens, Mfnf. 99, 



ridet, In Quint. Nov. 95, l68* 
rigat, El. iv. 76. 
rigent, Ad EL vii. 8. 
rigida, In Quint. Nov. 165. 
rigidi, EL i. 34, vi. 64. 
riguas, El. i. 83. 
ripa, Ad Leon, iii, 3. Ma/?/ 65. 
ripae, ^ Pa*r. 75. Epit. Da. 

182. 
rifuro, £/. vii. 49. 
ritu, El. vi. 67. 
rivi, £/. vi. 71. 
rivos, Add. El. vii. 5. 
rivum, Ad Patr. 3. i¥a»/ 62. 
rogante, £/. ii. 10. 
rogiinti, EL iv. 6l. 
rogis, EL iii. 10. 
rogo, ^4c? Leon. iii. 4« J» 06. 

Pr. El. 5, JVta. &c. 69. Ad 

Patr. 117. 
Roma, Ep. P. B. ii. S, iv. 1. 
Romano, Ad Salf. 21. 
Romanus, EL vi. 27. 
Romuleae, Ad Patr. 79. 
Romulidum, Ad Leon. iii. 7« 
rore, EL iv. 45, v. 86. In Ob. 

Pr. EL 1. Ad Salf. 27. 
rofa, £/. iii. 20. 
rofce, J» 06. Pr. 43. 
rofas, EL v. 90. 
roiaque, El. vi. 21. 
rofcida, EL v. 42. Epit. Da. 

140. 
rofcidus, El. iii. 32. 
rofea, In Quint. Nov. 133. 
rofeam, £/. i. 84. 
rofis, EL iii. 48, v. 60. 
roftro, Epit. Da. 104. 
rota, Nat. &c. 37. 
rotas, EL v. 46. 
rotarum, Nat. &e. 44. 
rotat, El. i. 38. 
rotatus, £;?. P. 5. iii. 11, 
rotis, Ep. P. B. i. 6. 
Roiifi, Ad J. Ro. 78. 
Roufio, Ad J. Ro. 87. 
Rouiius, Ad J. Ro. 47t 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ruant, Nat. &c. 20. 
rubent, EL iii. 40. 
rubefcit, EL v. 42. 
ruber, EL i. 62. 
rubri, Epit. Da. 185. 
ruentum, EL iv. 121. 
rugis, Nat. &c. 8. 
ruina, Nat. &c. 26. 
ruinae, I» Quint. Nov. 218. 
ruinofa, J/* Quint. Nov. 140. 
rumpe, £/. iv. 3. 
rupe, In Quint. Nov. 67. 
rupes, Nat. &c. 52. .Maw/. 

66. £;>#. Da. 114. 
rupibus, In Quint. Nov. 25. 
rupit, In Ob. Pr. 37. J» Quint. 

Nov. 34. 
rupt&, EjDiY. Da. 158. 
rura, £/. v. 120, vii. 52. 

Man/. 57. Epit. Da. 32, 

117. 
ruris, EL vii. 11. De Id. PL 

35. 
ruri'us, Ad J. Ro. 63. 
rufticus, Apol. 1. 
rutilante, Epit. Da. 215. 
rutilat, JVa£. &c. 40. 
rutilis, In Quint. Nov. 173. 
rutilus, Ad Patr. 38. 
Rutupina, Epit. Da. 162. 
ruunt, El. v. 96. 



S. 



Sabini, In Quint. Nov. 50. 
facer, El. v. 12, 22, vi. 77. 

In Quint, Nov. 62. Ad J, 

Ro. 21. 
facerdos, EL v. 77. De Id. PL 

29. >4<i Sff(T. 26. 
facra, EL iii. 20, iv. 30, 44, 

vi. 65. Ad Leon. iii. 4. 
facrae, Epit. Da. 197. 
facratis, £/. vi. 82. 
facraque, In Quint. Nov. Ill, 
facras, Ad Patr. 56, 



facri, Ad Patr. JO. 
facrificus, Ad Patr. 26. 
facrilegique, In Quint. Nov* 

100. 
facris, Man/. 42. ^ /. Ho. 

52. 
facro, EL v. 6l, 102. Nat. &c. 

24. JSpi*. Da. 207. 
facrorum, 2w 06. Pr. EL 13. 

Deld.Pl. 1. 
faecla, £/. v. 136. 
faecli, Nat. &c. 60. 
foeclo, ito. &c. 6. 
faecula, jE/. vi. 82. In Quint. 

Nov. 30, 127, 155. Epit. Da. 

111. 
faepe, EL i. 33, 35, ii. 10, iii. 

68, iv. 6, v. 76, vii. 3, 78. .Z» 

Qttiw*. JVotf. 6*3, I89. In Ob. 

Pr. EL 17, 61. Man/. 62. 

£"/»*. Da. 38. 
fa&pius, £/. i. 51, vi. 17, 54. 
faeva, El. ii. 3, IS. Ad Patr. 

107. 
fasvior, El. iv. 87- Ad Leon. 

ii. 8. 
faevus, In Quint. Nov. 126. 
fagacem, El. vi. 67. 
fagaci, De Id. PL 28. 
fagax, Ad Patr. 28. 
fagitta, J/i 0b. Pr. 26. 
fagittae, El. vii. 67. 
fagittam, EL vii. 47. 
fagittas, EL iii. 29, vii. 3. 
fagittis, ^rfd. J3/. vii. 9. 
falaces, Jw Quint. Nov. S4. 
falebras, £/. iv. 99. 
fales, £pz7. Da. 56. 
falices, Epit. Da. 70. 
falis, In Ob. Pr. El. 3. 
Salmafii, In Salm. 7. 
Salmafio, In Salm. H. 1. 
Salmafius, In Salm. 3. 
falo, EL v. 84. In Salm. 1. 
falfa, Ad Salf. 41. 
Salfillc, Ad Salf. 17. 
SaMllo, ^d 6wy; 6\ 



VERBAL INDEX, 



faltem, El, v. 137, vi. 41, 79- 

falubre, Ad Salf. 29. 

falvcre, Ma///. 25. 

faluai, £/. i. 4. 

falus, Ad Salf. 23. 

falutat, El. iii. 61. 

falutem, El. v. 47, 53, v. 1. 

falutiferaa, El. iv. 46, 

falutiferum, El. v. 73, 

falutis, I// Quint. Nov. 88. 

Samaritadas, £/. iv. 115. 

Samii, El. vi. 59* 

fana, ^4d./. iio. S6. 

fanam, El. vi. 1. 

fanata, El. vi. 57» -4fd Pflfr. 

20. 
fandaque, Epit. Da. 200. 
fan&orumque, In Quint. Nov* 

104. 
fanftus, Ad J. Ro. 30. 
fanguine, El. vi. 75. Jz* Ob. 

Pr. 26. In Quint. Nov. 150. 

Ad Pair. 62. 
fanguinis, Epit. Da. 138. 
fanum, Ad Salf. 18. 
fapidiflima, Apol. 1. 
fapientius, £/. v. 93. 
fapuifles, El. vii. 27- 
fariffiferi, El. iv. 65. 
farraca, I?/ Ob. Pr. El. 52. 
fat, El. i. 72. Jrc 06. Pr. El. 

68. Manf. 8$. 
fata, J?/, iv. 76, v. 125, vi. 20. 
fatelles, El. ii. 17. 
fatis, El. iii. 17. In Quint. 

Nov. 205. ^ Pair. 113. 

31a;//: 17. JSpif. Da. 172. 

^*<f /. Ho. 27. 
fatius, Apol. 9. 
fatos, In Ob. Pr. EL 10. 
fatrapae, In Quint. Nov. 162. 
fatrapafque, Ep. P. B. i. 1. 
fatrapum, ££. iii. 8. 
fatur, Manf. 86. 
faturantem, £Z. iv. 45. 
Saturni, Epit. Da. 79. 
Satumus, Nat, &c. 39, 



Satyri, El. v. 11 9. 

faxa, El. v. 106. In Qnint. 

Nov. 143. Epit. Da. 120. 
faxis, EL iv. 87. 
Saxonicas, Manf. 82. 
Saxonicus, £/. iv. 74. 
fcandet, Ep. P. B. ii. 10. 
fcapulifque, In Quint. Nov. 

56. 
fcelerata, In Quint. Nov. 162. 
fceleri, In Quint. Nov. 18. 

Nat. &c. 64. 
fceleris, In Quint. Nov. 10, 

215. 
fcelerifque, El. vi. 63. 
fcelus, EL v. 40. Ep. P. B. i, 

4. 
fcena, E/. i. 28. 
fceptra, In Quint. Nov. 4. 
fceptrigero, In Quint. Nov. 

203. 
fceptrum, El. i. 37. 
fcholse, El. i. 90. 
fcholis, EL ii. 24. De Id. PL 

36. 
fciant, In Quint. Nov. 100. 
fciens, De Id PL 33. Epit. Da. 

89. 
fcientia, Ad Patr. 90. 
fciet, Ad J. Ro. 86. 
fcilic&t, EL vi. 35. Add. El. vii. 

3. Ep. P. B. i. 5. In Quint. 

Nov. 197. Epit. Da. 12. 
fcintillant, EL i. 77. 
fcire, El. vi, 5, 6. 
fcitabere, £/. vi. 79. 
fcombri, J/i Salm. 1. 
fcopuli, JE/. v. 41. 
fcopulofum, In Quint. Nov. 

153. 
Scorpionis, In Ob. Pr. El. 53*. 
Scotis, In Quint. Nov. 4. 
fcriniis, In Salm. 9. 
fcripfiffe, EL iv. 69, 
Scythicus, EL iv. 11. 
fe, £/. v. 1. Ad Patr. 64. 

Manf. 10, 



VERBAL INDEX, 



fecernit, Epit. Da. 96. 
feceflibus, Ad Patr. 74. 
fecreto, Ad Leon. i. 6. 
fecum, Epit, Da. 95. 
fecunda, El. iii. 16*. 
fecundas, In Quint. Nov, 129. 
fecundis, Ad Leon, iii. 7. 
fecundo, Epit. Da. 30. 
fecura, Man/. Q3. 
fecuraque, Ad Patr. 109. 
fecurus, In Quint, Nov. 6. 
fed, El. i. 47, iv. 5£, vii. 25. 

Apol. 5. irc Quint. Nov. 194. 

Ira Oft. Pr. EL 65. Nat. &e. 

43, 60. Del*/. P/. 13. Ad 

Patr. 12, 73. ^d. Salf. 40. 

Jtfan/1 35. E/»f. Da. 89- 
fede, £/. iii. 30, iv. 86. Ad. J. 

Ro. 31. 
fedebam, £/. iii. 1. 
fedebat, In Quint, Nov. 5. 
fedebis, Man/. 5. 
fedebo, Ad Patr. 102. 
fedens, De Id. PL 19. Ad 

Patr. 44. 
fedentem, El. iv. 41. 
fedes, Ad Salf. 28. 
fedefque, In Ob. Pr. EL 44. 

Ad J. Ro. 76. 
fedet, EL v. 102. Jn QwzVtf. 

Nov. 145, 181. 
fedibus, Nat. &c. 29. 
feditque, E;?*7. Da. 15. 
fedula, Ad J. Ro. 6. 
feges, Epit. Da. 64. 
fegnes, EL iv. 3. 
femel, £/. vii. 87. In Ob. Pr. 

6. Ad J. Ro. 39. 
Semeleia, El. v. 91. 
femicaperque, El, v. 122. 
femide&mque,, El. iii. 30, 
femideofque, EL vi. 56. 
femideuf'que, EL v. 122. 
femina, ^f</. Patr. 18. 
femine, £/. vi. 81. 
femoto, Ad Patr. 15. 
femotus, Man/. 96. 



femper, £/. i. 47, iii. 21, 64. 

In Quint. Nov. 145. Jrc 0b. 

Pr. El. 7. Nat. &c. 43. Ad 

Salf. 35. Epit. Da. 85, 101. 
fempiterni, In 0b. Pr. EL 41. 
fene&am, £/. v. 55. 
fene&us, Man/. 74. 
fenemque, £/. vi. 69. 
fenes, In Quint. Nov. 218. 
fenefcentem, £/. v. 103. 
fenex, EL iii. 57. ^ Chr. 4, 

Mew/ 49, 70. 
fenilem, El. iv. 35. 
feniles, El. v. 49. 
fenior, £/. i. 29. 
fenis, In Quint. Nov. 69. 
fenium, EL i. 54. 
fenfim, El. v. 138. Ad Leon. 

i. 8. 
fen fi fie, Man/. 31. 
fenfifiet, ^4d Leo«. ii. 5. 
fenfit, In Quint. Nov. 204. 
fenfus, Ad Leon. ii. 9. Jr* 

Quint. Nov. 219. 
fenfufque, ^c? Patfr. 51. 
fentis, Ad Sal/ 3. 
fentit, Ad Patr. 40. Ata/i 67. 

Epit. Da. 16. 
feorfus, De Id. PL 14. 
fepe, £pz>. Da. 54. 
fepofiti, ^d P<rtr. 24. 
feptem, Ad Chr. 1. 
feptemgpmino, Ep. P. B. ii. 2. 
feptena, EL v. 113. 
fepteno, Man/. 36. 
feptus, /« Quint. Nov. 139. 
fepulchrali, £/. iii. 6. 
fepulchris, /id ^//^ 38. 
fepulchro, Epit. Da. 28. 
fepulchrorum, El. ii. 17. 
fepultani, Epit. Da. 115. 
fepulto, ^(/ /. Ro. 85. 
fequamur, ^(«/ Patr. 63. 
fequenti, hi Quint. Nov. 152. 
fequi, EL i. 17, 72, vi. 4, vii. 

86. 
fequitur, EL v. 36, vii. 79. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fecretus, In Quint, Nov. 75. 
fera, El. iv. 53, 55, v. J 19. In 

Quint. Nov. 54. 
fereno, El. i. 77. 
ferenum, Mavf. £8. 
feries, In Quint. Nov. 58. Nat. 

&c. 66. 
ferior, El. v. 140. 
fermonibus, In Quint. Nov. 

193. 
fero, Ad Pair. 120. Ad Salf. 

75. Epit. Da. 102. 
ferpere, El. vi. 45. 
Terpens, In Quint. Nov. 90. 

Ad Pair. 38. 
ferpit, El. iii. 47. ^d Leon. i. 

6,7. 

ferum, Epit. Da. 60. 

ferus, Ep. P. B. ii. 5. iV<rf. &c. 
47. -Ej^. -D«. 86. 

fervabam, Epit. Da. 180. 

fervabitis, ^d Patr. 120. 

fervans, De Id. PI. 5. Manf. 
76. 

fervantur, Epit. Da. 214. 

fervare, Nat. &c. 36. 

fervati, In Quint, Nov. 197. 

fervator, In Quint. Nov. 185. 

ferv&tque, Nat. &c. 6l. 

iervus, £/. i. 33. 

feu, EL i. 29, 30, 41, 43, 45, 
Deld. PL 16. Ad Patr. 27 y 
28. Epit. Da. 103, 104. Ad 
J.Ro. 40, 41. 

fevera, EL ii. 16. 

feveri, Epit. Da. 84. 

feverus, £/. vii. 57. 

ii, £/. i. 16, iv. 9, 48, v. 75, 
vi.79, vii. 31. -Ejo.P* £• iii- 
7. ^4d ieow. i. 3, 9- i» 
£a/m. if. 5. In Ob. Pr. 5, 
9, 17, 21. In Quint. Nov. 
43, 106. De Id. PL 36. Ad 
Patr. 61,62, 116. Ad Salf. 
31, Marc/. 4, 78, 88, 94. 
£/>#. Da. 33, 109, l68 f 175. 
^d /. Ro. $6. 



fibila, #af. &c. 28. Ad Pair. 

38. 
fibilat, Epit. Da. 47. 
Sibylla?, <4d Patr. 25. 
fie, £/. iii. 15, vi. 71, vi. 63, 

64, 81, 91. Ad Leon. i. 1. 

In Quint. Nov. 127, 160. 

Nat. &c. 65. Epit. Da. 17, 

21, 97. 
Sicana, El. v. 66. 
Sicanio, EL iv. 5. 
ficca, Iw Ob. Pr. EL 2. 
ficcine, EL iv. 89, 90. jE>. P. 

£. ii. 1. £/>*£. Da. 21. 
Sicelicum, Epit. Da. 3. 
Siculi, Nat. &c. 56. 
fidera, El. i. 51, v. 38, 115. 

Nat. &c. 14. £^V. Da. 76. 
fidereum, £/. iii. 51. 
fideris, Ad Patr. 36. 
fiderum, In Ob. Pr. El. 59. 

De Id PL 16, 24. 
Sidoni, El. iv. 110. 
Sigeius, EL vii. 21. 
figna, Nat. &c. 44. 
fignaque, In Quint. Nov. 109. 
fignum, EL iv. 33. 
filente, El. iv. 114. De Id. PL 

27. 
filentia, In Quint. Nov. 149. 
filentum, In Quint. Nov 78. 

Epit. Da. 25. 
filet, £/. v. 26. In Quint. Nov. 

216. 
filvae, Epit. Da. 6l, 160, 186. 
iilvas, El. v. 45. Manf. 67. 

Epit. Da. 120. 
filveftres, Ad Patr. 52. 
filveftrique, In Quint. Nov. 88. 
filvii'que, Epit. Da.211. 
fim, Ma?{/: S3. £p*7. Da. 159, 

173- 
fi miles, Epit. Da. 94-. 
fmrillima, El. vii. 53. 
Simoentis, JS/. i. 83. 
iiinpliei, Ad J. Ro. 1. 
fiuiplicitas, Epit. Da. 200. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



fimul, El. v: 27, 28. Ep. P. B. 
i. 1. In Quiitt. Nov. 51. 
Man/. 100. £ptf. Da. 15. 
Ad J. Ro. 71. 

fimulachraque, ^4d. Pa£r. 54. 
fimules, Ad Patr. 67* 
finceram, EL iv. 53. 
fine, EL v. 71, vi. 64-, vii. 26. 

£/>. P. P. iii. 2. Jw Ob. Pr. 

34. £j»Y. Da. 2 J, 212. Ad 

J. Ro. 31. 
iingula, JVaf. &c. 36. 
finis, £/. iii. 24, iv. 91. Ad 

Patr. 76. 
finiftra, In Quint. Nov. 49. 
finiftro, Ad Salf. 39. 
linit, EL i. 85, vi. 4. 
finu, Ep. P. B. iv. 2. -De Ia\ 

PL 26. ^d. J. Po. 84. 
fmunt, Man/. 9S. 
finuofi, EL i. 27. 
fiiius, £/. v. 58, 100, vi. 48, 

vii. 48. In Quint. Nov. 81. 
Sionsece, EL iv. 113. 
Sionaeo, Epit. Da. 219» 
Siopen, In Quint. Nov. 72. 
fiqua, El. vii. 101. 
fiquando, Manf. 80. 
fiquid, £/. vi. 80. Ad Salf. 

29- 

Sirena, ^4rf Leon. iii. 1. 

fis, £/. iv. 50, 107, vii. 93. Ad 

Patr. 60. 
lit, EL i. l6>36,72,iv.40, 47, 

53. In Ob. Pr. 45. De Id. 

PL 13, 33. Epit. Da. 101, 

144. 
fiti, Epit. Da. 40 
litu, Epit. Da. 64. 
fitufque, JVaf. &c. 13. 
fmaragdis, In 0b. Pr. EL 64. 
fobriaque, EL vi. 6*2. 
focia, Nat. &c. 38. 
fociabitur, Epit. Da. 22. 
fociali, Manf. 82. 
ibciantes, .^d Patr. 33. 
focio, £/><£. Pa. 105. 



focios, In Quint. Nov. 10, 164. 
fociumque, Epit. Da. 34. 
Socraticos, Add. EL vii. 5. 
fodale, £ptf. Da. 118. 
fodalem, EL i. 7. 
fodales, Epit. Da. 95. 
fol, £/. v. 31. 
fola, EL vi. 70, vii. 75. In 

Quint. Nov. 41. Epit. Da. 8. 
folantia, Epit. Da. 91 • 
fole, £/. iii. 40, v. 42. Epit. 

Da. 40. 
folebant, ^e? Patr. 41. 
folebas, E/. ii. 1. Epit. Da. 

38. 
folebit, Epit. Da. 43. 
foleis, Jra Quint. Nov. 112. 
folum, £/. vii. 83. 
folennes, EL vi. 9. 
folenni, J« Quint. Nov. 68. 
folent, £/. iv. 62. 
folers, De Id. PL 8. Ad J. Ra. 

78. 
folet, EL iv. 47, vii. 36. In 

Quint. Nov. 139. iVa*. &c. 

56. £^7. Da. 70. 
foli, In Quint. Nov. 190. Ad 

Salf. 14. Ma;*/. 13, 14. 
folis, El. v. 98. Ep. I.B. 2. 

J/i Qtwtf. Nov. 6, 210. I» 

06. Pr. EL 55. 
folitas, £/. v. 37. Manf. 67* 
folito, In Quint. Nov. 211* 

iYa^. &c. 39. 
folitoque, Nat. &c. 51. 
follennes, Ad Patr. 26. 
follicitabo, EL iv. 6. 
follicitatus, Ad J. Ro. 69. . 
folo, EL iii. 4, iv. 84. Apol,6. 
folubile, Nat. &c. 6. 
folum, EL iii. 42. Jm Quint* 

Nov. 40. 
folus, £/. iv. 84, v. 124, vii. 

6*0, 98. In Quint. Nov. 87- 

Epit. Da. 58, 141, 
folnta, El. v. 4. 
folutos, Manf.%9.. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



folvere, Epit. Da. 31. 
folvit, In Quint. Nov. 91. 
folvuntur, In Quint. Nov. 223. 
fomni, Ad Patr. 15. 
fomnia, El. iii. 68, v. 10. In. 

Quint. Nov. 138. 
fomno, In Quint. Nov. 22, 

187. 
fomnos, El. iii. 67. In Quint. 

Nov. 137- 
fomnum, Epit. Da. 52. 
ibmnus. El. v. S7» In Quint, 

Nov. 77. 
fonabat, Epit. Da. 155. 
fonabunt, Ad Patr. 34. 
fonant, El. v. 106. Epit. Da. 

61. 
fonantem, El. vi. 47. 
fon antes, Epit. Da. 120. 
fonans, In Quint. Nov. 173. 
fonat, El. iv. 118, v. 21. Ad 

Leon. i. 4. 
fonitum, In Quint. Nov. 183. 
fonitus, El. v. 12. 
fono, £/. iii. 58. Ad Leon. i. 

8. Nat. Sec. 19. 
fonoram, In Quint. Nov. 207, 
fonorum, El. iv. 39. 
fonos, El. iii. 62, iv. 38. In 

Ob. Pr. El. 25. Ad Patr. 58. 

Epit. Da. 159. 
fontes, In Quint. Nov. 154. 
ibpor, In Quint. Nov. 92. 
fopprque, El. iii. 36. 
fordet, El. i. 6l. 
foror. In Ob. Pr. 20. 
fororibus, In Ob. Pr. El. 11. 
fortem, Ad J. Ro. 68. 
fortemve, El. i. 19. 
fors, Man/. 78. Epit. Da. 103, 
, 109. 
fpargit, In Quint. Nov. 212. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 9. Epit. Da. 

195. 
fparfi, £1. iv. 32. 
fparfifti, £/. iv. 35. 



fpatiantur, El. vii. 51. 

fpatiarier, El. iii. 37. 

fpatiere, In Ob. Pr. 48. 

fpatio, De Id PI. 15. 

fpatium, In Quint. Nov. 170. 

ipe, ^0/. 7. 

fpeftacula, £J. vi. 41, vii. 57. 

fpectanda, Ad Patr. 90. 

fpectans, Ad Salf. 35. 

fpe&antia, In Quint. Nov. 18S. 

fpe&are El. vii. 87. 

fpe&afie, £/. i. 39. 

fpeclat, In Quint. Nov. 171. 

fpedlo, El. i. 39. 

fpei, Ad Salf. 37. 

fpelunea, In Quint. Nov. 141. 

fperabam, Epit. Da. 145. 

fperare, El. iv. 123. Ad Patr. 

116. Ad.J.Ro.75. 
fperaflfe, Epit. Da. 172. 
fperavis, Epit. Da. 110. 
fpernunt, J/i Quint. Nov. 96. 
fpes, JS/. iv. 105. In Salm. H. 

5. Ad. Patr. 70. Epit. Da. 

92, 198. Ad J. lio. 44. 
fpicas, Man/. 39. 
fpicula, El. vii. 42. £/w7. Da. 

192. 
fpirans, ^d £eorc. ii, 2. 
fpirantia, £/. i. 59, vi. 78. /4<J 

5a//. 20. 
fpiratque, iVaf. &c. 55. 
fpiritus, El. v. 21. -4c? Pa*r. 

35. Man/. 83. 
fpiffo, ^6? Patr. 118. 
fplendida, £/. vii. 54. 
fplendentis, El. iii. 5. 
fponfamque, In Ob. Pr. El. 22. 
fponte, Man/. 54, 56. 
fpreta, Ep. P. 5. iii. 6. 
fprevi, £?. vii. 4. 
fpumea, El. iv. 88. 
fpumabat, Ad Patr. 43. 
fqualebant, 7?j Ob. Pr. El. 1. 
fqualorque, Nat. &c. 13. 
ftabat, £/, ii. 13. 



VERBAL INDEX 



rtabulantem, El. vi. 83. 
ftabunt, Ad Patr. 31. 
Stagyrites, El. iv. 25. 
Hat, EL i. 89. 
ftatim, In Quint. Nov. 204. 
ftella, Ad Chr. 2. 
itellarum, Ad Pair. 40. 
itellatae, In Quint. Nov. 137. 
itellato, In Ob. Pr. El. 35. 
ftelligeras, Ep. P. B. iii. 7. 
ftelliparumque, £/. vi. 85. 
flerile, Ad J. Ro. 74. 
fteriles, /« Quint. Nov. 76. 
fterilefcet, Nat. &c. 10. 
fternere, EL iii. 8. 
fternit, Ad Patr. 27- 
ftet, £/. vi. 6l. 
fletSre, Maw/. 66. 
ftimulis, In Quint. Nov. 146. 
fiirpe, In Quint. Nov. 117. 
ftolis, EL i. 70. 
firato, £/. vii. 31. 
ftratum, In Ob. Pr. El. 64. 
ftratus, Epit. Da. 129- 
ftrepitat, Epit. Da. 48. 
ftrepitu, Ad Patr. 74. 
tfrepitum, Man/. 63. 
Crepitus, £/. iv. 122. 
ftridat, Nat. &c. 21. 
ftridentes, /« Qwi/tf. iVoz?. 205. 
ftrides, £/wY. -Da. 171. 
ftridetque,. In Quint. Nov. 38. 
ftringit, Nat. &c. 54. 
ftru&a, £/. i. 73. In Qwiw* . Nop. 

21 6. 
ftruit, In Quint. Nov. 13. 
ftudia, Ad J. Ro. 30. 
ftudiis, Ad Leon. iii. 7. 
ftudioque, y4</</. £/. vii. 1. 
fludiumque, Ad Patr, 63. 
flulte, EL vii. 45. 
ftupefecit, Manf. 12. 
ftupentes, 7/t Q?«W. Nov. 125. 
fhipuere, J« Qwi/rt. No*. 2l6. 
ftupui, £/. i. 53. 
Styge, Ep. P. B. iv. 2. 
Stygiis, £/. ii. 9, iv. 95. 



Stygis, /« 0b. Pr. 8* 

Stygium, Nat. &c. 31* 

fuafifti, ^d Pctfr. 82. 

fuaviloquo, ^d Patfr. 33. 

fuaviter, EL vii. 100. 

fub, El. i. 47, ii. 6, iii. 31,4% 
iv. Ill, 113, v. 77, 123, vi. 
55, 88. Ad Leon. ii. 21. ^fi 
C^r. 3. In Quint. Nov. 22, 
95 , 121. Ira 06. Pr. £/. 28, 
43, 56. Nat. &c. 65. ^<f 
Pa*r. 15, 118. Ad Sal/. 13. 
Jl/aw/: 20, 28, 37, 65, 74, 81, 
84. Epit. Da. 11, 15, 53, 
l65 7 180, 201. Ad J. Ro. 
$7. 

fubdolus, In Quint. Nov. 90, 

fubduxit, Ad J. Ro. 14. 

fubeat, EL v. 30. 

fubeunda, EL i. l6. 

fubeunt, In Quint. Nov. 6l. 

fubierunt, EL vii. 73. 

fubiit, EL iii. 3. 

fubire, El. v. 56. 

fubitdque, Nat. &c. 26. 

fubito, El. i. 86, iii. 53, iv. 1. 
vii. 80. In Quint. Nov. 125, 
219. 

fubitoque, In 0b. Pr. EL 
30. 

fubje&aque, Ad Patr. 86. 

fubjedas, In Quint. Nov. 188. 

fubiime, Ep. P. B. iii. 11. 

fublimis, In Ob. Pr. El. 48. 
Ad Patr. 110. 

fubmerferat, EL iii. 33. 

fubmiflb, In Quint. Nov. 57* 

fubmittet, Ad Chr. 7. 

fubmittite, EL i. 67. 

fubrideatque, Tn Ob. Pr. 46. 

fubterraneas, In 0b. Pr. EL 
44. 

fuburbani, EL i. 50. 

fuceo, EL ii. 7. 

fuccoque, Ira 0b. Pr. 3$< 

fuccos, Epit. Da. 150. 

faccreicet, Manf. 51. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fuccumbit, El. iii. 23, 
fudantes, Epit. Da. 186. 
fufflatu, In Salm. H. 7. 
fuffundar, Man/. 99> 
fulcantibus, Nat. &c. 8. 
fulcata, Man/. 36. 
fulphur, In Quint. Nov. 35. 
fulphureo, Ep. P. B. i. 6. 
fume, £/. iv. 9, 105. 
fumm&, EL vii. 1. In Quint. 

Nov. 181. JEpft. Xte. 11. 
fummae, £/. vii. 13. Nat. &c. 

34. 
Summanus, In Quint. Nov. 23. 
fummas, Epit. Da. 131. 
fummo, iVctf. &c. 35. 
fummus, El. vii. 98. 
fumptu, Ad Pair. 78. 
fumptum, EL vi. 24. 
fuperam, ^d /. Ro. 45. 
fuperantia, £/. i. 55. 
fuperaque, Nat. &c. 21. 
fuperas, EL iv. 82. 
fnperaffe, EL v. 101. 
fuperaverat, In Quint. Nov. 

48. 
fuperbci, Ad Sal/. 15. 
fuperbum, £/. vii. 31. 
fupereminuiffe, El. vii. 6l. 
fuperefle, Ad Pair. 11 7. 
fupereft, £/. iv. 123. 
fuperi, Ad Pat r. 21. 
fuperimpofitum, In Quint. Nov. 

174. 
fuperirijeSis, El. v. 7$> 
iuperis, El. vii. 98. A/w//. 73. 
iup'eros, Ep. P. B. iv. 4>. Nat. 

&c. 32. 
fuperfit, Epit. Da. 168. 
fuperftes, In Ob. Pr. 34. 
fuperum, EL vi. 57* Ep. P. B. 

iii. 2. 
fupino, .<4<M. £/. vii. 1. 
fupinus, El. vi. 25. 
fuppiices, In Ob. Pr. 2. 
fupplicis, EL iv. 66. 
lupplicium, Ep. P. B. iii. 6. 

VOL. I. 



fupra, Epit. Da. 60. 
fuprema, EL vi. 84. 
fupremaque, Man/. 14. 
furdeat. EL vii. Q0. 
furge, £/. v. 52. In Quint. Nov. 

97- 
furgebat, Epit. Da. 9. 
furgentem, Epit. Da. I89. 
furgis, EL vi. 66. 
furgit, JTflif. &c. 45. 
furgun.t, EL v. 119. 
furripit, Epit. Da. 111. 
furripuifle, Ep. J. B. 4. 
Sufa, EL 66. 
fufceperat, Man/. 58. 
fufurros, In Quint. Nov. 177* 
fufpenfa, El. vi. 39» 
fu'fpirat, El. v. 95. 
fufpiria, In Quint. Nov. 34. 
fuftinuere, EL vii. 3 6. 
fufurrans, EL v. 89 
fylva, El. iii. 17, v. 27. 
fylvamifque, El. v. 121. 
Fylvas, EL v. 131. 
fylvis, £/. iii. 25. 
fyrmate, In Quint. Nov. 82. 

T. 

tabellae, El. i. 1. 

tabifico, i>* Quint. Nov. 37. 

tabo, £/. iii. 19. 

tacebo, In Ob. Pr. El. 65. 

tacitae, Ma;/./: 85. 

tacitas, In Quint. Nov. \9* 

tacite, EL vii. 77- 

tacito, In Quint. Nov. 187. 

taciturn, £/. vi. 45. 

taciturna, In Quint. Nov. 69* 

tacitus, El. iii. 1. 

taedet, Epit. Da. 66. 

taedis, In Quint. Nov. 69. 

Taenarib, EL v. 66. 

Tsenarioque, Ep. P. B. iv. 2, 

Tsenaro, /« 06. Pr. 5. 

Tago, £/. iii. 46. 

talem, De Id. PL 34. 

* f 



VERBAL INDEX, 



tales, In Oh. Pr. EL 25. 
tali,EZ. iii. 57 '. In Quint. Nov. 

90. 
talia, EL iii. 31, 68. 
talibus, El. vi. 53. In Quint. 

Nov. 23. 
talis, EL ii. 13, 15, iii. 49, iv. 

28, 101, vii. 21, S3. In 

Quint. Nov. 86. 
talos, EL iii. 55. 
Tamara, Epit. Da. 178. 
tamen, £/. ii. 7, v. ill. J« 

Quint. Nov. 113, 194. De 

Id. PL 14. AdPatr. 12, 67. 

Jlta/ 56. E/nY. Da. 158, 

15p. AdJ.Iio. 6. 
tangere, E/??Y. Da. 121. 
tangunt, £/. v. 75. 
tanta, £/. iii. 27- 
tantaeque, In Quint. Nov. 18. 
tanti, El. vi. SO. EjmY. JDa. 

115. 
tantum, Ad Salf. 7- Man/. 4, 

tapetia, E/. vi. 39* 

tarda, In Quint. Nov. 85. In 

Ob. Pr. EL 52. Ad. Salf. 2. 
tarde, El. iv. 139. 
tardior, Nat. &c. 39. 
tardus, E/. iv. 59* 
Tarpeia, El. i. 69. 
Tartara, EL v. 20. Ad Pair. 

21. 
Tartareo, E/. iii. 16. Ep. P. B. 

III. 11. 
Tartareoque, In Quint. Nov. 

161. 
Tartari, In Ob. Pr. EL 43. 
Tartefliaco, El. iii. 33. 
Tarteflide, El. v. 83. 
Taffo, Man/. 6. 
toda, EL v. 129. Man/ 6l. 

Epit. Da.\0<2. 
te&o, E/. i. 47. 
teftus, In Quint. NiM, 79» 
teget, In Quint. Nov., 81. Ad 

Pair. 38. 



Teia, EL vi. 22. 

tela, E/. iv. 108, v. 100, 136, 

vii. 3, 34, 43. In Ob. Pr. 

27. Epit. Da. 195. 
Telamonis, EL iv. 24. 
Telegoni, In Ob. Pr. 18. 
telluris, In Ob. Pr. 3. 
tellus, EL i. 7. E/. v. 55, 95. 

In Quint Nov. 150. 
temeraria, EL v. 71. In Quint, 

Nov. 192. 
temerk, In Ob. Pr. El. 29. 
Temefaeo, In Quint. Nov. 207. 
temnes, Ep. P. B. III. 5. 
temone, ZVatf. &c. 43. 
temperabit, Ad Salf. 40. 
temperat, In Quint. Nov. 199' 
tempeftates, In Quint. Nov* 

12. 
templa, In Quint. Nov. 6l. 

Ad Pair. 32. Ad J. Ro. 58. 
tempora, EL i. 25, 48, ii. 5, v, 

138. Manf. 85. 
tempore, Add EL vii. 7- 
temporis, JVtf£. &c. 17, 48. 
temporum, Ad J. lio. 23. 
Tempus, EL v. 1. Nat. &e, 

14. 
tendebas, Ad J. Ro. Yf. 
tendit, El. i. 60. In Quint, 

Nov. 20. Epit. Da. 143. 
teneat, El. vi. 41. ^d" J. Ro. 

40. 
tenebras, E/. vi. 4. In Ob. Pr, 

8. 
tenebris, El. i. 43, iii. 66, iv. 

95, v. 34. In Quint. Nov. 

60. 
tenebrifque, Nat. &c. 2. 
tenellas, EL iv. 45. 
tenellus, E/. vi. 52. 
tenemus, ^<i Pa^r. 66. 
teneri, £/. vii. 93. 
teneris, EL iv. 51. 
tenero, El. vii. 6, In Quint, 

Nov. 106. 
tenefos, Epit» Da. 141 . 



VERBAL INDEX. 



tenet, El. i. 9- In Ob. Pr. EL 

]4. Nat. &c. 62. 
tenorem, Nat. &c. 36. 
tentamina, P/* Quint. Nov. 43. 
tentare, £/?#. Da. 133. 
tentafti, Pp. P. B. II. I. 
tentat, P/. v. 101. Pw Qui?it. 

Nov. IS. 
tentatur, P/* 06. Pr. 7. 
tenues, P/. v. 47- In Quint. 

Nov. 176. Ad Patr. 4. Epit. 

Da. 193. 
tenuit, In Quint. Nov. 3. Ad 

Patr. 53. 
tepente, P/. v. 3. 
tepidis, ^/d Parr. 29. 
tepido, P/. v. 104. 
tepidos, EL vii. 48. 
teque, El. iv. 73. ^rf J. #0. 

52. 
ter, P/. iv. 33. De Id. PL 33. 
tereris, Ad J. Ro. 42. 
terga, EL iv. 34, vii. 36. In 

Quint. Nov. 210. 
tergo, EL vii. 6*8. 
tero, Ad Chr. 4. 
terra, P/. iii. 58, v. 72. In 

Quint. Nov. 26. Nat. &c. 

60, 64. ^ Parr. 87. 
terra, In Quint. Nov. 170. 
terra*, EL ii. 19, iv. 97. 
terrasque, Ad Patr. 87. 
terrain, EL iv. 35. 
terraque, J« Quint. Nov. 200. 
terrarum, P« Quint, Nov. 9* 

Deld.PL 21. 
terras, P/. i. 5. Prc Quint. Nov. 

134, 188. Nat. See. 42. 
terrebunt, Nat. &c. 31. 
terrent, P/. v. 9 1, 
terrere, Epit. Da. 42. 
terris, EL iv. 81, 91, v. 135. 

De Id. PL 18. Man/. 81. 

Epit. Da. 19, 187. 
terror, ^d SW/I 24. 
terruere, In 0b. Pr. EL 51. 
terruit, P/. iv. 11 7, 



tertia, Ad Leon. I. 5, 

tefqua, EL iv. 98. 

teftis, P/. vii. 28. 

teflatus, Ad. Patr. 84. 

tetra, In Quint. Nov. 87. Nat* 

&c. 12. 
tetigerunt, P/. iii. 65. 
Tethy, P/. v. 83. 
Teucrigenas, In Quint. Nov. 2* 
Teumefius, EL vi. 23. 
Teutonicos, EL iv. 2. 
texit, EjtrcV. Da. 144. 
texto, Jw Quint. Nov. 179, 
texuit, P/. vii. 66. 
thalamos, EL v. 49. P» Quint, 

Nov. 75. 
Thalia, P/. vi. 48. 
Thamefis, EL i. 9. ife/. 32. 

Epit. Da. 177. ^ /. P\o* 

18. 
Thamefina, P/?zf. Da. 3. 
Thaumantia, EL iii. 41. 
theatra, EL i. 70. 
theatri, EL i. 27. 
Themidos, Pw Ob. Pr. EL 40. 
Thermodoontea, In Quint, 

Nov. 105. 
Thefbitidis, EL iv. 97. 
Thetidi, Z/i Quint. Nov. 52. 
Thiodamantseus, P/. vii. 24, 
thoes, Epit. Da. 97. 
tholos, EL vi. 44. 
Thracia, EL iv. 77. 
Thracis, EL iv. 65. 
Threfla, EL vi. 37. 
thura, In Quint. Nov. 223. 
Thufca, Epit. Da. 13. 
Thufci, Epit. Da. 126. 
Thufcus, Epit. Da. 127. 
thyafufque, Ad J. Ro. 21. 
Thyone.0, EL vi. 18. 
Thyrfi, Epit. Da. 77, 82. 
Thyrfis, Epit. Da. iv. 12. 
Thyrfo, Epit. Da. 219- 
Tibridis, Ad Leon. III. 5. 
Tibris, In Quint. Nov. 52. Ad 
Salf. 56. 

* f 2 



VERBAL INDEX. 



timeas, In Quint. Nov. 129. 

timet, Add. EL vii. 10. 

timidos, EL vii. 7. 

Timor, In Quint. Nov. 148. 

timuere, El. v. 40. 

tinda, £/. i. 58. £ptf. Da. 192. 

tingere, _E/. iii. 28. 

Tiphceus, In Quint. Nov. 37. 

Tirefian, EL vi. 68. 

Titanidos, In Quint. Nov. 172. 

Tithonia, In Quint. Nov. 133. 

Titboniaque, EL v. 31. 

titulos, £/. v. 74. 

Tityrus, Manf. 34. Epit. Da. 

69, 1 17. 
togatae, In Ob. Pr 30. 
togatas, El. ii. 1 1. 
toll at, Ad J. Ro. 29." 
tolkre, EL iv. 57- £/>. P. #• 

IV. 3. 
Tomitano, El. i. 22. 
Tonantis, i« Quint. Nov. 204. 
tonitrua, iw Quint. Nov. 47. 
tormit, jE/. vii. 49. 
tori, Epit. Da. 213. 
toro, EL v. 50. 
toros, £/. v. 72. 
torpefcere, In Quint. Nov. 106. 
torpidam, J» Quint. Nov. 73. 
Torquati, Manf. 50. 
Torqaatum, Ad Leon. II. 1. 
torqueat, EL vii. 41. 
torquens, Epit. Da. 104. 
torquere, Ad Patr. 2. 
torre, El. i. 44. 
torfiffet, ^(/ Leorc. II. 7. 
tortilis, ^d P«tfr. 106. 
torvi, In Quin. Nov. 141. 
tot, El. 1.77, iv. 113. In Ob. 

Pr. 39. In Quint. Nov. 104. 

Epit. Da. 119, 120. 
tota, EL iii. 12. 
tota, Ma/?/: 98. 
totam, J« Quint. Nov. 55. 
totidem, £;;?Y. Da. 10. 
totidemque, i/t Qwiwf. Nov. 

175. 



toties, £/. i. 63, ii. 2. 

totis, £/. ii. 24. Ad. J. Ro. 32. 

toto, EL v. 19, 37, 97- In 

Quint. Nov. 226. 
totos, El. vi. 48. 
totum, El. i. 26. 
totumque, Ad Patr. 2. 
totus, £/. vii. 74. Ad Leon. II. 

8. 
trabea, /;* Qumf. JVov. 118. 
Trachinia, Manf. 66. 
tractum, Ad Salf. 11. 
tradidit, Manf 10. 
tragoedia, EL i. 37. 
trabentes, In Quint. Nov. 60. 
trahit, In Quint. Nov. 183. 
trajedla, In Quint. Nov. 144, 
tranato, In Quint. Nov. 2$. 
transfige, EL vii. 5j. 
tranflucent, In Quint. Nov. 176* 
tranftulit, Apol. 4. 
tranfverfo, Ad Pair. 106. 
traxit, Epit. Da. 113. 
Treantae, JSp?Y. Da. 17 6. 
tremebunda, JV r a^. &c. 12. 
tremebundaque, Ad Patr. 21. 
trernendo, Nat. &c. 19. 
tremendus, De Id. PL 23. 
tremente, In Quint. Nov. 200. 
tremit, In Quint. Nov. 66. 
tremuere, In Quint. Nov. 217- 
tremula, EL vi. 40. 
tremulae, Ad Patr. 25. 
tremulofque, EL i. 59. 
trepidam, In Quint. Nov. 21. 
trepidos, EL v. 128. 
tres, El. vi. 36. 
Tricorouifer, In Quint. Nov . 

55. 
trifidum, Ep. J. B. 4. 
triformem, In 0b. Pr. EL 57. 
trina, Ep. P. B. III. 3. 
Trinacria, In Quint. Nov. 36. 
trino, De Id. PI. 32. 
trinum, In Ob. Pr. 21. 
Trione, Manf. 36. 
trionum, Ad Chr, 1. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



triplex, In Quint. Nov. 94. 
triplici, Ad Pair. 23. 
tripodas, Ad J. Ro. 59> 
Triptolemus, EL iv. 11. 
trifle, El. v. 100. Ep. P. B. 

III. 8. Ad Pair. 108. Epit. 

Da. 61. 
trifles, El. ii. 23. 
trifti, £/. iii. 15. 
triftia, El. iii. 2, vii. 88. 
triumphali, -E/. iii. 60. 
triumphos, El. vii. 7- 
Troja?, Iw Qimtf. JVov. 30. 
trophasa, El. vii. 8 Add. EL 

vii. 2. 
truces, EL vii. 26. ^4d Cfo\ 8. 

Epit. Da. 84. 
trux, Nat. &e. 55. 
tuba, E/. iii. 60. 
tubam, £/. iv. SO. In Quint. 

. Nov. 207. 
tubicen, Nat. &c. 58. 
tueri, In Quint. Nov. 169. Ad 

Pair. 117. 
tuifque, Nat. &c. 63. 
tulerat, Epit. Da. 11, 
tuliffe, ^/;o/. 10. 
tuliflet, El. i. 21. 
tulit, £/. vi. 88, vii. 11. Ep. 

I. B. 2. In Quint. Nov. 88. 

Epit. Da. 104. 
turn, Ad Pair. 44. Maw/I 54, 

65, 94. Epif. £>«. 16*, 55, 

140, 145, 157, 166, 168, 

174, 181. Ad J. Ro. 85. 
tumere, EL iv. 72- 
tuniidiifque, y4d $«//". 36. 
tumulis, In 0b. Pr. El. 17. 
tumulo, Man/. 18. 
tumultus, Ad J. Ro. 29« 
tunc, EL iii. 9. Iw 06. Pr. El. 

15. ^ P«ifr 30. 
tu.nica-que, EL v. 107. 
tuque, El. i. 73. jDc Id. PL 2. 

I» 0/;. Pr. 29. ^d Sa//. 24. 
turba, EL i. 78, 80, ii. 20, v. 

06', vi. 18, vii. 53. In Quint. 



Nov. 225. Ad Tatr. 108. 

Ad. J. Ro. 80. 
turbae, In Quint. Nov. l6§. 
turbatos, El. iii. 67. 
turbine, Ep. P. B. I. 8. In 

Quint. Nov. 24. 
turgebant, In 0b. Pr. EL 3. 
turgentes, In Quint. Nov. 99. 
turgidulus, Epit. Da. 159- 
turmae, EL iii. 65. 
turmas, El. vi. 85. 
turpe, In 0b. Pr. 13. 
turpem, In 0b. Pr. El. 21. 
turres, El. iii. 5. 
turrigerum, El. i. 74. 
turris, El. v. 62. In Quint. Nov. 

172. 
turrita, El. 1. 65. 
tuta, El. v. 126. Ad Patr. 97. 
tutela, .4d J. Ro. 78. 
tutius, £/. vii. 27. 
tutus, EL iv. 3. ^ P'jfr. 100. 
Typhlonta, In Quint. Nov. 71. 
tyrannus, In Quint. Nov. 7- 
Tyrrhenum, In Quint. Nov. 

108. 

V, U. 

vaca, EL iii. 64. 

vacaus, El. vi. 63. ^(i Patr. 

51. 
vacat, ££. iv. 51. Epit. Da. 15, 

18, 26, 35, 44, 50, 57, 62, 

68,74, 81,87,93,112,124, 

139, 161, 179. 
vacui, Ad Leon. I. 5. Ad J. 

Ro. 73. 
vacuis, Ad Patr. 11. 
vacuo, £/. iv. 118. 
vacuos, In Quint. Nov. 63. 
vacuum, El. i. 18, vii. 2. 
vada, El. v. 11 6, vi. 74. 
vade, El. iv. 39. 
vafer, E/. i. 33, vii. 67. 
vaga, E7. iv. 71. In Quint. 

Nvo. 198. In 0b. Pr.EL 5. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



vagabatur, In Quint, Nov. 

87. 
vagas, EL v. 16. 
vagitumqw, El. vi. 83. 
vagos, Epit. Da. 6. 
vagum, El. i. 64. 
vagus, EL v. Q7- In Quint. 

Nov. S. Epit. Da. 113. Ad 

J. llo. 7. 
vale, Epit. Da. 123. 
valeret, In Ob. Pr. 10. 
valet, EL vii. 10. Ad Pair. 22. 

Jlf<2«/*. 4. 
valle, ^c? J. Ho. 64. 
valles, £/. i. 83. 
vallibus, Ad. Salf. 9g. Epit. 

Da. 59. 
van a, Ad EL vii. 2. Man/. 40. 
varia, iUa/?/. 20. 
variant, JV<atf. &c. 51. 
variare, Ad Pair. 59* 
variatas, Man/. 48. 
variis, EL iii. 43. In Quint. 

Nov. 206. 
vario, EL v. 63. 
varios, In Quint. Nov. 177 '• 

Epit. Da. 144. 
vafta, In Quint. Nov. 8 6. iVfltf. 

&c. 58. 
vaftaeque, Ad Pair. 42. 
vafti, Nat. &c. 68. 
vaftove, In Ob. Pr. EL 34. 
vates, 17. i. 21, iv. 97, vi. 77. 

In Ob. Pr. El. 20, 49. Ad 

Patr. 44, 85. Man/. 13. 
vati, ^c? Sal/. 30. 
vatis, ^d Pa£r. \7- 
vatum, £/. v. 17, De Id. PL 

28. 
ubi, EL iv. 13, vi. 75. Man/. 

59, 85, £jR#, Da. 14, 149, 

218. Ad J. Ro. 20. 
ubique, EL iii. 52. In Ob. Pr. 

EL 36. 
veclus, EL vii. 84. 
vehique, Ad J. Ro. 45. 
■vehor, In Ob. Pr. EL 60. 



vehunt, Man/. 96. 

vel, El. i. 54, iv. 109, v. 101, 

In Quint. Nov. 126, 174, 

Nat. &c. 65. Ad Patr. 95. 

Ad J. Ro. 38. 
velatus, In Quint. Nov. 90. 
velim, Ad Patr. 92. 
velis, EL vi. 5. 
velit, El. i. 8. JEpif. Da. 24. 
velocitatem, In Ob. Pr. El.6l. 
velox, In Quint. Nov. 48. 
veluti, El. iii. 41. 
venam, EL vi. 31. 
venator, EL v. 50, vii. 37. 
venefkiis, In Quint. Nov. 51. 
venenatus, In Ob. Pr. 11. 
venerande, In Quint. Nov. 94. 
venerandi, Ad Patr. 5. 
venerandus, El. iii. 57. 
venerantem, In Quint. Nov. 33* 
veneres, Ad Patr. 80. 
veni, EL iii. 63. 
veniam, El. iv. 6l. 
veniamque, EL iv. 6l. 
venias, Ad J. Ro. 50. 
veniens, In Quint. Nov. 1. 
venies, Man/. 52. 
veniet, EL v. 87. 
veniffe, EL i. 81. Jfa;^. 55. 
venifc, EL v. 13, 14, 107, vi. 8. 

Ad Patr. 90. Ad Sal/ 14. 
veniunt, 2sp/f. Da. 97. 
venter, In Salm. H. 3. 
venti, In Quint. Nov. 46. 
ventorum, Ad Sal/. 11. 
ventos, EL iv. 5. In Quint. 

Nov. 2 1 0. 
ventre, EL vi. 1. 
ventum, In Ob. Pr. EL 63. 
Venus, El. i. 82, v. 103, vii. 

63. Add. EL vii. 70. 
Veniifque, EL vi. 51. 
venufto, EL v. 59* 
ver, is/, v. 23, vii. 13. Epit. 

Da. 185. 
vera, EL iv. 55. /» Ob. Pr. EL 

8. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



veracius, In Quint. Nov. 

195. 
verba, El. i. 32, 92, iv. 50, vii. 

88. In Salm. H. 2. In Ob. 

Pr. 17. In Quint. Nov. 88, 

Ad Sal/. 6. Epit. Da. 91. 
verberat, EL iv. 11 9. 
verbis, Ad Patr. 11. 
verborum, Ad Patr. 51. 
vere, £/. v. 2. 

verecundo, El. iv. 50, v. 53. 
verendi, El. iii. 9. 
verendos, In Quint. Nov. 118. 
Vergivium, El. i. 4. 
veri, El. iv. 44. Jra Quint. Nov. 

33. 
veris, £/. i. 48, v. 6, 7, 28, 29- 

30, 109, 138. 
verna, El. v. 68. 
vernantes, El. iii. 45. 
vernaique, In Quint. Nov. 10. 
vernat, Man/ 75. 
vero, El. vii. 30. £p. P. J5. 

III. 9. 

veroque, In Quint. Nov. 192. 
Territ, In Quint. Nov. 82. 
verfantem, El. iv. 44. 
vertice, £/. v. 41. In Quint. 

Nov. 83. Ad Patr. 3. 
vertigine, Ad Leon. II. 9- 
vertit, El. iv. 115. Jw Quint. 

Nov. 15. 
vertitur, £^*Y. Da. 51. 
verum, El. vii. 99. Ad J. Ro. 

72. 
vefana, Nat. &c. 4. 
vefper, /« Quint. Nov. 62. 
vefpertinas, El. v. 80. 
Vefta, El. v. 102. 
vefte, El. vi. 65. 
veftibus, El. ii. 21. 
veftigia, Ad Chr. 5. In Quint. 

Nov. 85. Ad Patr. 20, 104. 
veftis, El. iii. 55, v. 108. 
veftitu, El. iii. 42. 
veftit, In Quint Nov. 134, 
veteri,,£/. vi. 54. 



veterum, El. iv. 43. In Quint. 

Nov. 110. 
vetuftas, Ep. J.B.I. Nat. &c. 

12. Man/ 40. 
vetufti, Nat. &c. 60, DeldPL 

30. 
vetuftis, £/. v. 123. 
vexabunt, J\W. &c. 14. 
vexilla, In Quint. Nov. 103. 
vexit, El. vi. 72. 
via, £/J. 58, iv. 94. Ad Patr. 

69. 
via, El. v. 36. 
vice, In Quint. Nov. 147. 
viam, El. iv. 8. 
vias, El. i. 80, vii. 54. Ad 

Patr. 2. 
vice, £j9. P. £. IV. 13. 
vicem, Epit. Da. 98. 
vices, £/. v. 29. Nat. Sec. 49. 
vicina, El. i. 49. ^f d Sal/ 32. 

JfyzY. £>a. 90. 
vicinior, In Quint. Nov. 173. 
vicinis, Ad J. Ro. 12. 
vida, El. iv. 10. 
viclo, EL i. 24. 
\ictus, £/. vii. 39, 85. Afaw£ 

63. 
videas, EL i, 52. 
videbis, El. iv. 13. 
videbit, £/^. Da. 27. 
videbo, Man/ 97. 
videnda, EL i. 80. 
videntur, EL v. 70. In Quint. 

Nov. 147. 
video, EL v. 13. 
videor, In 0b. Pr. EL 25. 
viderat, EL iv. 33. 
videre, El. iv. 126. 
videri, El. v. 129, vii. 63. 
viderit, In Ob. Pr. 38. 
vides, EL iv. 40. 
videt, EL v. 46. «T/j Quint. Nov. 

16, 52. 
videtur. El. v. 47. 
vidi, £/. i. 55, In 05. Pr. EL 

57. 



VERBAL INDEX, 



vidimus, Man/. \6. 
vidifle, Epit. Da. 115. 
vidiffet. In Oh. Pr. 14. 
vidit, El. iii. 2. De Id. PL 26. 
vigebit, Epit. Da. 29. 
vigens, Man/. 77. 
vigefcit, El. v. 7. 
vigiles, Ad Patr. 105. 
vigor, Nat. &c. 60. 
vili, Ad J. Ro. 41. 
vilifque, Epit. Da. 100. 
villae, EL vii. 13. 
villarum, EL vii. 52. 
vim, ^dd. El. vii. 10, 
vimina, Ejm£. Da. 144. 
vina, £/. vi. 21. 
vincant, £/. i. 5/. 
vince, El. iv. 124. 
vincere, EL vii. 30. 
vincla, JEywV. Da. 135. 
vino, £/. vi. 13. 
viuofo, Ad Salf. 27- 
violabitur, El. iv. 109. 
violas, In Ob. Pr. El. 29. 
vipereo, ^c? Pa£r. 110. 
vires, EL v. 5, vi. 30, vii. 29. 

In Quint. Nov. 107* 
virefcit, £/. v. 4. 
vireta, £Z. iv. 30. Ad J. Ro. 

8. 
virga, In 0b. Pr. 20. Epit. 

Da. 23. 
virginei, £piV. Da. 214. 
virgineos, £/. i. 52, v. 110, vi. 

40. 
virginibus, EL i. 71. 
virginis, ££. vii. 69. 
virgo, £/. i. 35, iv. 81. Ad 

Chr. 1. 
viri, E/. iv. 18. 
virides, El. iv. 6. 
viridi, El. v. 51. £p#. Da. 9. 
viro, £/. iv. 56'. 
virorum, J» Quint. Nov. 56. 

In Salm. 10. Maw/i 52. 
viros, El. iv. 114, vii. 10. 

Man/. 79- 



virofque, Ad Salf. l6\ 
virtus, Maw/. 96. Epit. Da. 21 > 

200. 
virtutis, Jw Quint. Nov. l6\ 
virum, £/. iv. 76, 122, v. 112, 

vi. 72. Ad Salf. 15. 
virum, In Quint. Nov. 144. 

AdJ.Ro.bl. 
vis, EL v. 39. ■£/»*. Da. 83. 
vifa, El. iii. 37, v. 64. 
vifaque, In Quint. Nov. 191. 
vifcera, In Salm. II. 4. In 

Quint. Nov. 14. Nat. &c. 

15. 
vifere, Ad J. Ro. 6l. 
viferet, Epit. Da. 116. 
vifum, Majf. \J. 
vifus, El. iii. 36. In Quint. 

Nov. 138. 
vita, El. i. 26. Epit. Da. 168. 
vitabuntque, Ad Patr. 104. 
vita;, El. iv. 20. Manf. 85. 
vitam, Manf. 1, 225. 
vitamque, In Quint. Nov. 60. 
vitare, EL i. 87. Maw/. 59. 
vitibus, EL iii. 51. 
vitis, El. vi. 20. 
vitream, Jw Ob. Pr. El. 27. 
vitreis, In Quint. Nov. 66. 

Epit Da. 189. 
vivas, EL iv. 95. 
vivat, El. vi. 60. 
vivere, EL ii. 8, iv, 20. 
vivi, EL i. 57- 
vivida, Manf. 75. 
vivis, £/. iv. 84. 
vivit, EL iv. 17. 
vivitque, Ad Leon. III. 5. 
vix, El. v. 126, vi. 6. Ep. P. 

B. II. 10, III. 10. In Quint. 

Nov. 77. Manf. 28. Epit. 

Da. 108. Ad J. Ro.12. 
vixiffe, EL vi. 67- 
vixiflet, In Ob. Pr. 19. 
ulciicere, In Quint. Nov. 102. 
villus, El. vii. 11, vii. 50. 
ulmo, EL i. 49. Epit. Da. 15. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



ulnis, Nat, &c. 50. 

ultima, El. ii. 3. Nat. &c. 67 '. 

Epit. Da. 182. Ad J. Ro. 

81. 
ultor, EL i. 43. 
ultra, Epit. Da. 202. 
ultrix, In Quint. Nov. 181. 
ultro, In Salm. H, 8. 
umbra, EL i. 50, v. 85, 140. 

Ep. P. BAIL 12. AdChr.7. 
umbra, Epit. Da. 52. 
umbracula, Epit. Da. 2l6. 
umbra?, Ad Patr, l6. 
umbrarum, EL vi. 76. In 

Quint. Nov. 78. 
umbras, EL- iii. 51, v. \7. 

Man/. 31. Epit. Da. 11. 

Ad J. Ro. 7. 
umbrafque, EL i. 13. 
umbris, In Quint, Nov, 153. 

Epit. Da. 22. 
umbrofa, Add. EL vii. 5, 
una, £/. vii. 102. 
una, Ad Leon. I. 10. 
unanimes, In Quint. Nov. 13. 
unda, £/. i. 9, iv. 88. Ad Leon. 

III. 5. Epit. Da. 185. 
undarum, ^(/ /Sa//*. 40. 
undas, Jra Quint, Nov. 171. 

£pi*. Da. 172. 
tinde, Add. EL vii. Q. Epit. Da. 

128. 
undecima, Epit. Da. 156. 
undis, EL ii. 9, vi. 65. It* Ob. 

Pr. 32. 1/2 Qwiwf. Nov. 66. 

Epit. Da. 178, 189. 
ungue, EL iv. 64. 
unguibus, Ad J. Ro. 34. 
ungula, EL iv. 119. 
uni, Epit. Da. 171, 172. 
unicuique, Ad Leon. I. 1. 
unius, De Id. PL 14. 
univerfis, De Id. PL 10. 
uno, In Salm. H. 7. 
unquam, Ep. P. R. III. 7. 
unum, EL v, 111. jSptf. Da 

108. 



unus, £/. vii. 92. 
unufque, De Id. PL 10. 
vocabere, Epit. Da. 211. 
vocantem, In Ob. Pr. EL 45, 
vocans, Nat. &c. 47. 
vocaris, Epit. Da. 208. 
vocarit, In Ob. Pr. 6. 
vocat, EL i. 28, v. 116, vi. 50. 

In Quint. Nov. 117. Epit, 

Da. 69- 
voce, Ad Leon. II. 5. -4^ Patr^ 

84. Maw/. 64. 
vocem, Ad Patr. 59. 
voces, £/. i. 2. Ira Quint, Nov, 

91, 212. £pft. Da. 4. 
vocibus, Epit. Da, 137* 
volafle, EL iv. 82. 
volatilefque, /rc Ob. Pr. EL 4>7- 
volat, EL vi. 26. ira Quint, 

Nov. 46. 
volatu, Ma?/. 53. Epit, Da, 

105. 
volens, ^c? Patr. 64. ^ £a//l 

1. 
volet, In Quint, Nov, 169. 
volitare, Manf. 29» 
volitet, Epit. Da. 102. 
volucres, -4d ^. ilo. 33. 
volucrum, Epit. Da. 100. 
volui, EL iv. 57, vii. 78. 
voluhli, Ep. P. B. I. 3. 
voluit, ^d J". Ro. 53. 
volumina, £/. iv. 43. 
voluptas, Epit. Da. 213. 
volutat, Nat. &c. 55. 
volvebas, In Quint. Nov, 186*. 
volvere, Ad Pair. 3, 
volvrt, £/. i. 56. Nat, &c. 3. 
volvo, EL iii. 31. 
voracem, Apol. 11. 
vorago, Ad Patr. 42. 
vorticibufque, Epit. Da. 76. 
vortunt, In Quint. Nov. 154. 
vofque, Ad Sal . 27. 
vota, InOb.Pr. EL IS. Ma/?/. 

14. Epit. Da. 30. 
votis, £/?. Pa. 109. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



votum, El. v. 111,779- 

vox, Ad Leon. I. 4. 

Upin, Man/. 47. 

urbano, Apol. 2. Ad Patr. 74. 

urbe, El. i. 47, iv. 12, 102, v. 

27, vii. 51. Epit. Da. 13, 

128. Ad J. Ro. 15. 
urbem, In Quint. Nov. 55. 
urbes, El. v. 105. In Quint. 

Nov. 23, 211. In Ob. Pr. 

El. 9. 
urbis, De Id. PL 37. 
urbs, £/. i. 9, 73. 
urget, £/. v. 54. 
urna, Mg?/. 90. 
urnis, Man/. 32. 
ufque, ,4d Chr. 8. 
Ufa, £pif. Da. 175. 
ufus, El. i. 88, v. 73. £j>. P. 

£. II. 6. Epit. Da. 144. 
ut, El. iii. 21, 40, iv. 91, v. 45, 

65, 114, vii. 102. Apol. 7. 

JVojf. &c. 39. De Id. PI. 33. 

^d Patr. 4. 
utcunque, ^c? Pafr. 6. 
uterque, El. i. 56, v. 28. iVaf. 

&c. 21. 
uteris, £/. v. 93. 
utinam, EL vii. 87. 
utque, El. iv. 47. -^^ Chr. 4. 

A T a£. &c. 56. 



utrique, El. v. 27. 
utrumque, Man/. 17. 
Vulcaniofque, ^rf 5a^! 2. 
vulgat, Jh Quint. Nov. 213. 
vulgi, JSpif . Da. 193. AdJ.Ro* 

79. 
vulnifico, is/, iv. 64. 
vultu, EL iv. 37- In Quint. 

Nov. 186. 
vultus, EL vii. 88. Ad Chr. 8. 

In Ob. Pr. ELM. Ad Patr. 

91. Man/. 91, 99. Epit. Da* 

167. 
vultufque, 22/?if. Da. 84. 
uva, jfyzf. Da. 65. 
uxori, £/. vii. 38. 



W. 

Wintoniaeque, EL iii. 14. 
Wintonienfis, In Ob. Pr. El..6% 
Wintonius, El. iii. 53. 



Zephyri, Epit. Da. 72. 
Zephyro, El. iii. 44. 
Zephyros, El. v. 2. 
Zephyrus, 2s7. v. 69* 



END OF THE LATIN INDEX. 



VERBAL INDEX 



OF 



ITALIAN WORDS USED BY MILTON. 



A. 

abbaglian, Son, iv. 6. 

accorto, Son. vi. 6. 

accoftandofi, Canz. 2. 

ad, Canz. 10. 

adorne, Son. iv. 10. 

agghiaccia, Son. v. XI. 

ago, Son. vi. 14. 

al> Son. ii. 14, iii. 1. 

Alba, Son. v. 14. 

alle, Canz. 12. 

alma, Son. iii. 5. 

alpeftre, £orc. ii. 10. 

alta, Son. ii. 8. 

altera, Son. iii. 8« 

alti, Son. iv. 8. 

alto, jSow. vi. 11. 

altre, Canz. 8. 

altri, Canz. 7, 8. 

altrui, Son. iii. 11. 

amabil, &>/?. iv. g. 

amante, Son. vi. 1. 

amanti, Son. v. 7. 

Amor, Soti. iii. 6, 11, 12. vi. 

14. 
amor, Sow. ii. 7; Cc»2. 4; 

Sow. iv. 2. 
Amore, C«wz. 15. 
amorofi, Canz. 1. 
amorofo, Sow. ii. 14. 
arco, Son. ii. 7. 
arene, Sow, v. 4* 



arma, Son, vi. 8. 

A mo, Son. iii. 10. 

arrivi, Ctfwz. 6. 

afpettan, Canz. 8. 

afpro, Son. iii. 1 . 

atti, Son. ii. 6. 

attorno, Cawz. 2 ; So/?, v. 11. 

avezza, Son, iii. 2. 

auventa, -Sow. iv. 13> 



B. 

bagnando, Soft, iii. 3. 
bei, Son, v. 1 . 
bel, Sow. ii. 1, iii. X0« 
bella, Son. iii. 3. 
bellezza, Son. iv. 7« 
ben, Sow. iv. 12. 
bene, Son, ii. 3. 
buon, Son. iii. 9, 14. 
buono, Son. vi. 6. 
burlando, Ca«z. 7. 



C. 

caddi, 5o«. iv. 4. 
caldo, -Sow. v. 5. 
cangio, Son. iii. 10. 
cantar, Son, iv. 11. 
canti, Son. ii. 9. 
canto, £o«. iii. 9. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



canzon, Canz. 13. 

cela, Son. v. 9. 

certo, Sow. v. 1, vi. 4. 

cetra, Son. vi. 12. 

che, Son. ii. 6, 7, 10, 14, iii. 

4, 10, iv. 2, 11, 14, v. 2, 7, 

8, vi. 2. 
chi, -Sow. ii. 12, iii. 14, v. 4. 
chiaman, Son. v. 8. 
chioma, Cawz. 10. 
ciafeun, Son. ii. 11. 
del, Son. iii. 14. 
ciglia, Son. iv. 8. 
colle, Sow. iii. 1. 
colma, Son. v. 14. 
colui, Son. ii. 3. 
come, Canz. iv ; Sow. v. 3. 
con, Son. iv. 1. 
cofa, Son. iii. 12. 
cofi, Son. iii. 6 ; Canz. 7. 
coftante, Sow. vi. 5. 
cui, Sow. ii. 1 . Canz. 9« 
cuor, Sow. ii. 14, iii. 13, iv. 7> 

vi. 3. 
cuore, Canz, 14. 



dabben, Son. iv. 4, 

deh, Son. iii. 13. 

defta, Son. iii. 7. 

diamante, Sow. vi. 

dice, Canz. 14. 

dinne, Canz. 5. 

Diodati, -Sow. iv. 1. 

diro, Son. iv. 1. 

dirotti, Canz. 13. 

difio, Sow. ii. 14. 

difufata, Son. iii. 4. 

divoto, Sow. vi. 4. 

dolcemente, Sow. ii. 5. 

donna, Sow. ii. 1 ; Canz. 14 ; 

Sow. v. 1. 
donne, Canz. 1. 
dono, Sow. vi. 3. 
dubbio, Sow. vi. 2. 



duole, Sow. v. 6. 
duro, Sow. ii. 10, iii. 13, vi, 
13. 



e, Sow. ii. 3. 
ei, Sow. v. 3. 
entrata, Sow. ii. 12. 
efler, Sow. v. 2. 
eterne, Canz. 11. 



F. 

far, Sow. v. 13. 
faro, Sow. vi. 4. 
faticofa, Canz. 12. 
favella, Sow. iii. 7* 
fedele, Sow. vi. 5. 
fia, Canz. 14. 
finche, S&n. v. 14. 
fior, Sow. iii. 7. 
forfe, Sow. v. 7> vi, 
forte, Sow. v. 3. 
fofs', Sow. iii. 13. 
frondi, Canz. 11. 
fuggir, Sow. vi. 2. 
fulgor, Canz. £). 
fuoco, Canz. 13. 
fuor, Sow. iii. 5. 
fuora, Sow. ii. 5. 



G. 

gentil, Sow. ii. 4. 
gia, Sow. iv. 4. 
giovane, Sow. vi. 1. 
giovani, Canz. 1. 
giovinetta, Sow. iii. 2. 
gran, Sow. iv. 13, vi. 7. 
gratia, Son. ii. 13. 
guancia, Son. iv. 5. 
guardi, Son. ii. 11. 
guiderdon, Canz. 11, 



VERBAL INDEX. 



H. 

bebbi, Sow. vi. 5. 
hemifpero, Sow. iv. 11. 
herbetta, Son. iii. 3. 
herbofa, Son. ii. 2. 
honefti, Son. iv. 8. 
honora, Sow. ii. 1. 
hor, Canz. 10. 
humil, Son. vi. 3. 
huom, Son. iv. 4. 



idea, Sow. iv. 6*. 
ignota, Canz. 3. 
imbrunir, Son. iii. 1. 
immortal, Canz. 11. 
impiglia, /Sow. iv. 4. 
inanti, Son. ii. 13. 
incerar, Son. iv. 14. 
indarno, Son. iii. 12. 
indegno, Sow. ii. 12. 
infiora, Son. ii. 8. 
ingegno, Son. vi. 10. 
ingiela, Son. v. 11. 
irmamora, -Sow. ii. 4. 
infanabil, /Sow. vi. 14. 
infu, /Sow. iii. 6. 
intero, Son. vi. 8: 
intefo, Son. iii. 9. 
intrepido, Sow. vi. 5. 
invecchi, Sow. ii. 14. 
invia, Son. v. 4. 
invidia, Son. vi. 9. 
io, Sow. iii. 8, 11, iv. 2, v. 8, 
vi. 4. 



L. 

lacci, Son. iv. 3. 
lato, -Sow. v, 6. 
leggiadra, Son.il 1. 
leggiadro, Son. vi. 6*. 
legno, Son. ii. 10. 



lento, Son. iii. 13. 

Libia, Sow. v. 4. 

lidi, Canz. 8. 

lieta, Sow. ii. 9. 

lingua, Sow. iii. 6 ; Canz. 3, 15; 

Sow. iv. 10. 
loco, Sow. v. 12, 
lor, Sow. v. 4. 
luna, Son. iv. 12. 



M. 

ma, Sow. iv. 6, v. 12. 

madonna, Sow. vi. 3. 

mai, Son. iii. 12; Canz* 5* 

mal, Sow. iii. 4. 

maraviglia, Sow. iv. 1. 

me, Cawz. 13; Sow. v. 13, vi. 2. 

meco, Sow. iii. rj. 

men, Sow. vi. 13. 

mentre, Sow. iii. 8, v. 5. 

mezzo, Sow. iv. 11. 

mi, Canz. 7 ; Sow. iv. 3, 14 v 

2, 6, 10. 
mia, Son. v. 1, 14. 
miglior, Canz. 6. 
mio, Sow. iii. 9, 13; Canz. 14; 

Sow. v. 2, vi. 3. 
mile, Sow. vi. 14. 
mondo, Sow. vi. 7. 
monftra, Son. ii. 5. 
mover, Sow. ii. io. 
mufe, Sow. vi. 12. 



natia, Sow. iii. 5. 
ne, Sow. iv. 5, v. 5. 
nero, Sow. iv. 9. 
nobil, Sow. ii. 2. 
nome, Sow. ii. 1. 
non, Sow. v. 2, 8. 
notti, Sow. v. 13. 
nova, Sow. iv. 6, 
novo, Sow.ii. 7. 



VERBAL INDEX. 



o, Son. ii. 9. 

occhi, Son. ii. 11, iv. 13, v. l, 

12. 
ogni, Son. ii. 3. 
onde, Canz. 8. 
orecchi, Son. ii. 11, iv. 14. 
oro, Son. iv. 5. 
ofi, Canz. 4. 
ove, Son. v. 6, vi. 14. 



quefta, Canz. 15. 
quivi, Son. v. 



R. 

Rheno, Son. ii. 2. 
rinchiufa, S'un. v. 9 
rifpondi, Canz. 13, 
ritrofo, Son. iv. 2. 
rivien, 5ow. v. 14« 
rofe, Son. y. 14. 



parco, Son. ii. 6. 
parli, Son. ii. 9. 
parole, 6'ow. iv. 10, v. 7* 
parte, Son. v. 9, vi. 13. 
paftorella, Son. iii. 2. 
pellegrina, Son. iv. 7. 
penfieri, Ca«z. 6 ; Sow. vi. 6. 
per, Son. v. 1, 4. 
perche, Canz. 2, 3, 12. 
percuoton, Son. v. 3. 
pefo, Son. iii. 11. 
petto, Son. v. 10. 
piano, Son. vi. 1. 
pianta, Son. iii. 14. 
piavofe, Son. v. 13. 
poco, &m. iv. 14, v. 10. 
poi, Son. vi. 2. 
popol, Sow. iii. 9, vi. 10. 
portamenti, Son. iv. 8. 
pofla, Son. ii. 10. 
pria, Son. v. 5. 
primavera, Son. iii. 5. 
prove, Son. vi. 4. 
puo, Son. iv. 12, v. 2. 



qual, Son. ii. 4, iii. 1. 
quando, Son. ii. 9, vi. 7. 
quanto, Son. v. 12, vi. 11. 
quel, Son. iv, 2, 9, 



S. 

faette, Son. ii. 7*. 
fcarco, Son. ii. S- 
fcocca, Son. vi. 7. 
fcoflb, Son. Vo 10. 
fcrivi, Canz. 2, 3. 
fe, Canz. 5 ; Son. vi. S. 
femplicette, Son. vi. la 
feno, Son. iii. 13. 
fenti, Son. v. 5. 
ieppi, Son. iii. 12. 
iera, Son. iii. 1. 
fereno, Son. iv. 9- 
fi, Son. n$. 13, v.3, 8, 9, 
fi, Son. iv. 6. 
fia, Canz. 5 ; Son. v. 8* 
fian, Son. v. 2. 
ficuro, Son. vi. 9. 
inella, Son. iii. 6. 
fo, Son. v. 8. 
foavi, Son. ii. 6. 
i'ol, Son. vi. 13. 
fola, Son. ii. 13. 
fole, Son. v. 2. 
folea, Son. iv. 2. 
foma, Conz. 12. 
fon, Son. ii. 7. 
fono, Son. vi. 2. 
fonora, Son. vi. 12. 
ibfpir, Son. v. 8. 
fotto, Son. iv. 6. 
foverchia, Canz. 12* 



VERBAL INDEX. 



fpalle, Canz. 12. 
tfpande, Sow. iii. 4. 
fpeme, Canz. 5. 
fpera, Son. iii. 4. 
iperanze, Son. vi. 10, 
fpeffo. Son, iv. 3. 
fpinge, Son. v. 6\ 
fpirto, Sow. ii. 4. 
fponde, Cawz. 9» 
fpreggiar, Son. iv. 2. 
ipuntati, Canz. 10. 
fte-ffo, Sow. vi. 2. 
ftrana, Sow. iii. 3 ; Canz. 3« 
ftrania, Sow. iii. 7« 
fua ? Sow. iii. 5. 
fui, Son, ii. 6. 
fuo, Canz. 14. 
fuoi, Sow. iv. 3, 13. 
fuol, Sow, v. 13. 
fuole, Sow. v. 3. 

T. 

Ill, Sow. vi. 13. 
talhor, Sow. iv. 4. 
Tamigi, Sow. iii. 10. 
tante, Sow. vi. 4. 
tanto, Sow. vi. 9. 
terreno, Sow. iii. 14. 
timori, Sow. vi. 10. 
traviar, Sow. iv. 12. 
treccie, Sow. iv. 5. 
trovar, Sow. v, 12. 
troverete ? Son. vi. 13. 



trouva, Sow. ii. 12. 
tu, Sow. ii. 9. 
tua, Son. ii. 8 ; Canz. 5, 
tuo, Sow. ii. 4. 
tuono, Sow. vi. 7- 
turbida, Sow. v. 9. 
tutte, Son.Y* 13, 



u,v. 

va, Sow. iii. 3. 
vaga, Sow. ii. 9. 
vaglia, Sow. ii. 13. 
vago, Sow. vi. llo 
val, Sow. ii. 2. 
valor, Sow. vi. 11. 
valore, Son. ii. 3. 
van, Canz. 7. 
vana, Canz. 5. 
vanta, Canz. 15. 
vapor, Sow. v. 5. 
varco, Sow. ii. 2. 
verdi, Canz. 9. 
vermiglia, Sow. iv. 5. 
verfeggiando, Canz. 4. 
vezzofamente, Sow. iii. 8« 
virtu, Sow. ii. 8. 
una, Sow. iv. 10. 
voi, Sow. vi. 3. 
volfe, Sow. iii. 11, 12. 
voftr', Sow. v. 1. 
ufcendo, Sow. v. 10. 
ufe, Sow. vi. 10. 



ElfD OF THE VERBAL INDEX. 



Pxinted by Law and Gilbert, St. John** Square, Clerkemrell, 



Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. 
Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide 
Treatment Date: March 2009 

PreservationTechnologies 

A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 

111 Thomson Park Drive 
Cranberry Township, PA 16066 
(724) 779-2111 



■ 



%■£$ 









